posted on 2024-09-05, 21:39authored byMax Gallien, Giovanni Occhiali, Vanessa van den Boogaard
Tax registration drives have become an increasingly popular intervention to expand the
coverage of tax nets across sub-Saharan Africa. However, doubts have recently been casted
on their impact, as there is increasing evidence that they do not lead to a substantial
increase in revenue, and might skew the tax registry so that towards vulnerable groups are
overrepresented. There is little explanation available for these outcomes, as the literature
focuses on the outcomes of these exercises – rather than on their processes and premises.
We seek to fill this gap through an evaluation of a tax registration exercise of small- and
medium-sized enterprises in Freetown, Sierra Leone, implemented by the National Revenue
Authority. We argue that the conflicting objectives between national and international
stakeholders, as well as between street- and higher-level officials, combined with a
technocratic view of the exercise that underestimated its political nature, led to its likely
unsatisfactory outcome in revenue terms. However, we also identify non-revenue outcomes
that may still be seen as positive from the perspective of policymakers, such as familiarising
many businesses with a revenue authority that they previously had very little engagement
with. While this outcome of registration exercises is frequently overlooked by similar
evaluations, it is one that local officials recognise as important in ‘building future taxpayers’.
History
Publisher
Institute of Development Studies
Citation
Gallien, M.; Occhiali, G. van den Boogaard, V. (2023) Catch Them If You Can: the Politics and Practice of a Taxpayer Registration Exercise, ICTD Working Paper 160, Brighton: Institute of Development Studies, DOI: 10.19088/ICTD.2023.012