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Taxation, Non-Tax Revenue and Democracy: New Evidence Using New Cross-Country Data

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posted on 2024-09-06, 05:57 authored by Wilson Prichard, Paola Salardi, Paul Segal
A large body of cross-country econometric research has investigated the possibility of a political resource curse, by which access to extensive natural resources reduces the extent of democracy and accountability. However, this literature has been plagued by problematic data and correspondingly inappropriate model specification. Dominant theories of the political resource curse focus on the political consequences of differences in the composition of government revenue, with greater reliance on non-tax revenue undermining democracy. However, most studies do not actually test this relationship: owing to the poor quality of government revenue data, they have focused instead on the impact of total resource income on democracy – a reasonable, but imperfect, approximation of the actual theory. Meanwhile, the robustness of those few studies that have focused on government revenue specifically is undermined by poor data quality. We overcome this problem by drawing on the newlycreated ICTD Government Revenue Dataset, which dramatically improves the quality of existing data and allows us to test directly the connection between the composition of government revenue and democracy. Employing this new data we re-test the most compelling econometric approaches from the existing literature, finding support for the existence of a political resource curse.

taxation, non-tax revenue, accountability, resource curse.

Funding

DfID, NORAD

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Publisher

Institute of Development Studies

Citation

Prichard, W., Salardi, P. and Segal, P. (2014) Taxation, Non-Tax Revenue and Democracy: New Evidence Using New Cross-Country Data. ICTD Working Paper 23. Brighton: IDS.

Series

ICTD Working Paper 23

IDS Item Types

IDS Working Paper

Copyright holder

Institute of Development Studies

Language

en

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    International Centre for Tax and Development

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