posted on 2024-09-05, 21:41authored byHenry C. Edeh
Achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) of poverty and inequality reduction
through redistribution have indeed become critical concerns in many low- and middle-income
countries, including Nigeria. Although redistribution results from the effect of tax revenue
collections, micro household-level empirical analyses of the distributional effect of personal
income tax (PIT) and value added tax (VAT) reforms in Nigeria have been scarcely carried
out. This study for the first time quantitatively assessed both the equity and redistributive
effects of PIT and VAT across different reform scenarios in Nigeria. Data used in this study
was mainly drawn from the most recent large scale nationally representative Nigeria Living
Standard Survey, conducted in 2018/2019. The Kakwani Index was used to calculate and
compare the progressivity of PIT and VAT reforms. A simple static micro-simulation model
was employed in assessing the redistributive effect of PIT and VAT reforms in the country.
After informality has been accounted for, the PIT was found to be progressive in the pre-
2011 tax scheme, but turned regressive in the post-2011 tax scheme. It was also discovered
that the newly introduced lump sum relief allowance in the post-2011 PIT scheme accrues
more to the high-income than to the low-income taxpayers – confirming the regressivity of
the current PIT scheme. However, the study further shows (through counterfactual
simulations) that excluding the relatively high-income taxpayers from sharing in the variable
part of the lump sum relief allowance makes PIT progressive in the post-2011 scheme. The
VAT was uncovered to be regressive both in the pre-2020 scheme, and in the current VAT
reform scheme. Further, after putting informality into consideration, the PIT was found to
marginally reduce inequality but increase poverty in the pre-2011 scheme. The post-2011
PIT scheme reduced inequality and increased poverty, but by a smaller proportion –
confirming a limited redistribution mainly resulting from the concentration of the lump sum
relief allowance at the top of the distribution. However, if the variable part of the lump sum
relief allowance is provided for ‘only’ the low-income taxpayers below a predefined income
threshold, the post-2011 PIT scheme becomes largely redistributive. VAT was uncovered to
marginally increase inequality and poverty in the pre-2020 scheme. Though the current VAT
scheme slightly increased inequality, it considerably increased poverty in the country. It is
therefore suggested that a better tax reform, with well-regulated relief allowance and
differentiated VAT rates, will help to enhance the equity and redistribution capacity of the
Nigeria tax system.
Funding
Default funder
History
Publisher
Institute of Development Studies
Citation
Edeh, H.C. (2021) 'Assessing the Equity and Redistributive Effects of Taxation Reforms in Nigeria', ICTD Working Paper 130, Brighton: Institute of Development Studies, DOI: 10.19088/ICTD.2021.020