posted on 2024-09-05, 22:08authored byGiulia Mascagni, Mick Moore, Rhiannon McCluskey
In recent years, domestic revenue mobilisation in developing countries gained increasing
prominence in the policy debate. Several factors explain this, including the potential
benefits of taxation for statebuilding; independence from foreign aid; the fiscal effects of
trade liberalisation; the financial and debt crisis in the “West”; and the acute financial
needs of developing countries.
Governments in developing countries face great challenges in mobilising tax revenues,
which result in a gap between what they could collect and what they actually collect. Tax
gaps are hard to quantify for reasons that are discussed in the report. However in is known
that significant contributors to tax gaps include tax evasion and avoidance, tax
exemptions, and inequitable rent-sharing in the extractive sector, amongst others. The
report discusses European and international actions to improve revenue mobilisation in
developing countries and it suggests some recommendations for future.
History
Publisher
European Union (Belgium)
Citation
Mascagni, G., Moore, M. and McCluskey R. (2014) Tax Revenue Mobilisation In Developing Countries: Issues and Challenges , European Union (Belgium)