posted on 2024-09-05, 21:10authored byVanessa van den Boogaard, Fabrizio Santoro
Most people in low-income countries contribute substantially
to the financing of local public goods through informally
generated revenue – that is, non-market payments that
are not required or defined by state law and are enforced
outside of the state legal system. However, very little
is known about how revenue is informally generated in
practice. By relying on original data from surveys with over
2,300 households and 117 community leaders in the Gedo
region of south-central Somalia, this paper offers novel
evidence on the magnitude and regressivity of informal
revenue generation and its relationship with the state.
Over 70 per cent of households surveyed reported paying
at least one informal fee in the previous year, representing
on average 9.5 per cent of their annual income. Among
households that contribute, poorer ones contribute greater
amounts than richer ones in relation to their income—
in line with evidence elsewhere on the regressivity of
informal taxation. Moreover, informal payments have
inequitable effects at the community-level, with individuals
in wealthier communities making more informal payments
than in poorer ones and, correspondingly, having access
to a greater number of public goods. The paper finds that
informal revenue generation can be more efficient and
effective than formal taxation and can be complementary
to district-level state governance. Summary of Working Paper 118.
History
Publisher
Institute of Development Studies
Citation
van den Boogaard, V. and Santoro, F. (2023) Explaining Informal Taxation and Revenue Generation: Evidence from South-central Somalia, ICTD Research in Brief 96, Brighton: Institute of Development Studies, DOI: 10.19088/ICTD.2023.043