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Subnational Value Added Tax in Ethiopia and Implications for States’ Fiscal Capacity

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posted on 2024-09-06, 07:36 authored by Richard Krever, Abehodie Yesegat Wollela
In most federal systems, state governments are funded through a combination of direct fiscal transfers from the central government, and the revenue they collect directly from locally adopted taxes. Ethiopia is a federal polity, but follows a slightly different path in the case of its most important tax source – value added tax (VAT). As is the case in many developing countries, VAT is a major source of government revenue in Ethiopia, and the tax is levied under central government legislation. However, unlike the more common practice of a central government collecting VAT and then earmarking some of the revenue for transfer to states, collection rights and administration powers over VAT imposed on a portion of the economy in Ethiopia are assigned directly to state governments. The result is a fiscal relationship between central and state governments in Ethiopia that is distinctive in three main respects.

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IDS

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Wollela, A.Y; Krever, R. (2018) 'Subnational Value Added Tax in Ethiopia and Implications for States’ Fiscal Capacity', ICTD Working Paper 75, Brighton: IDS

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ICTD Working Paper 75

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  • VoR (Version of Record)

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© Institute of Development Studies, 2018

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en

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    International Centre for Tax and Development

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