Strengthening Tax-Accountability Links: Fiscal Transparency and Taxpayer Engagement in Ghana and Sierra Leone || Fɔ put Trɛnk pa Taks Akawntebiliti Link dɛm: Transperɛnsi pa gɔvmɛnt kɔpɔ ɛn Ɛngejmɛnt wit di wan dɛm we de pe taks na Gana ɛn Salon || Renforcer les relations entre fiscalité et responsabilité : transparence fiscale et engagement des contribuables au Ghana et en Sierra Leone
posted on 2024-09-05, 20:48authored byVanessa van den Boogaard, Wilson Prichard, Rachel Beach, Fariya Mohiuddin
Taxation is high on the international development agenda, largely due to growing evidence that it can not only provide sustainable development funding, but also contribute to expanded responsiveness and accountability in government. This is because: (i) when forced to pay taxes citizens are more likely to feel ownership of government revenues, and demand benefits in return, while (ii) governments needing tax revenues are more likely to make concessions to taxpayers to encourage quasi-voluntary tax compliance. Recent research shows that taxation can lead to expanded responsiveness and accountability, but this is not guaranteed. Improvements in accountability and responsiveness from taxation depend on the political and economic contexts, as well as the policies and strategies adopted by governments and civil society actors. Without consistent focus on creating an enabling environment for tax bargaining, taxation can be little more than forceful extraction from often low-income taxpayers.
Existing evidence suggests three key factors that improve tax-accountability links: 1) improved public awareness, transparency, and taxpayer services; 2) a robust and engaged civil society; and 3) forums for taxpayer-government engagement.1 Yet, while these goals are increasingly accepted, there is less understanding of how to achieve them. This study asks, what specific interventions and strategies can governments, civil society, and development practitioners adopt to strengthen links between taxation, responsiveness and accountability? Relying on data from taxpayer surveys, focus group discussions, and interviews with key stakeholders in Ghana and Sierra Leone, we consider two types of initiatives. 1. Efforts to enhance transparency: under what circumstances are these most likely to be successful in informing, empowering and engaging taxpayers? 2. Attempts to spur popular engagement: what types of initiatives most effectively enable and motivate citizens to engage with and make demands on the state around taxation? This is a summary of ICTD Working Paper 114 by Vanessa van den Boogaard, Wilson Prichard, Rachel Beach, and Fariya Mohiuddin.
La fiscalité occupe une place importante dans le programme international de développement, en raison des preuves de plus en plus nombreuses qui montrent qu’elle peut non seulement financer le développement durable, mais également améliorer la réactivité et la responsabilité des gouvernements. Ceci s’explique par le fait que : (i) lorsqu’ils sont contraints à payer des impôts, les citoyens sont plus susceptibles de s’approprier les recettes de l’État et d’exiger des contreparties, tandis que (ii) les gouvernements qui ont besoin de recettes fiscales sont plus enclins à accorder des concessions aux contribuables afin d’encourager une conformité fiscale quasi-volontaire. Cette étude vise à déterminer les interventions et les stratégies spécifiques que les gouvernements, la société civile et les spécialistes du développement peuvent adopter pour renforcer les relations entre la fiscalité, la réactivité et la responsabilité.
History
Publisher
Institute of Development Studies
Citation
van den Boogaard, V.; Prichard, P.; Beach, R. and Mohiuddin, F. (2020) Renforcer les relations entre fiscalité et responsabilité : transparence fiscale et engagement des contribuables au Ghana et en Sierra Leone, ICTD Résumé des Recherches Numéro 59, Brighton: Institute of Development Studies
van den Boogaard, V.; Prichard, P.; Beach, R. and Mohiuddin, F. (2020) Strengthening Tax-Accountability Links: Fiscal Transparency and Taxpayer Engagement in Ghana and Sierra Leone, ICTD Research in Brief 59, Brighton: Institute of Development Studies