Does Collecting Taxes Erode the Accountability of Informal Leaders? Evidence from the DRC
Delegating tax collection to informal leaders could raise tax revenue but runs the risk of undermining the local accountability of those leaders. We investigate this trade-off by exploring whether city chiefs in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) were randomly assigned to collect property taxes in 2018. To measure accountability, we study the other side of the social contract: the distribution of resources by chiefs in a government cash transfer programme in which they had discretion over the recipients of development aid. In line with the preferences of citizens, chiefs who collected taxes allocated more programme benefits to poorer households and thus made fewer inclusion and exclusion errors. They were no more or less likely to pocket benefits themselves or allocate them to their families. Across a range of measures, citizens appear to have updated their beliefs of chiefs who collected taxes. We provide evidence that collector chiefs allocated aid to poorer households because door-to-door tax collection created opportunities to learn which households were in greatest need. In contrast to concerns of ‘decentralised despotism,’ the paper thus finds evidence of a chief’s accountability benefiting from delegating tax responsibilities to local leaders in low-capacity states. Summary of ICTD Working Paper 193. |
History
Publisher
Institute of Development StudiesCitation
Bergeron, A.; Ngindu, E.K.; Tourek, G. and Weigel, J.L. (2024) Does Collecting Taxes Erode the Accountability of Informal Leaders Evidence from the DRC, ICTD Research in Brief 136, Brighton: Institute of Development Studies, DOI 10.19088/ICTD.2024.087Series
ICTD Research in Brief 136Version
- VoR (Version of Record)