Introduction to Tax Policy Design and Development
Author: R M Bird and E M Zolt
Date: 2003
Size:
38 pages
(192 kB)
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Taxes matter. People talk about them and try to avoid them. Businesses react to taxes in how they organise their activities and in where they carry them out. This study from the World Bank looks at the issues and asks one key question: How can developing countries best design and develop tax policies to achieve their policy objectives, given the complex economic and political environments they face?
Developing countries face a difficult task in designing and implementing suitable tax systems. In practice, countries have often relied heavily on taxes on international trade, but this tax base is also becoming increasingly hard to implement in the face of pressures for trade liberalisation. As countries develop, the mass modern production and consumption activities (on which the tax systems of developed countries rest) are expanding and need to be brought into the tax base without overstraining administrative capacity. Economic growth is often encouraged by, and results in, closer involvement with the international economy, but such “globalisation” simultaneously may cause fiscal problems. Life is not easy for tax people in developing countries, and is becoming increasingly difficult. The problems are potentially greatly exacerbated by the political economy context within which taxation must be designed and implemented:
In these and other ways, the eternal problems of designing and implementing a good tax system continue to be complicated by the changing world within which such decisions are made. Countries no longer have the luxury to design their tax systems in isolation. There is increased pressure:
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Source:
Bird, R.M. and Zolt, E.M., 2003, 'Introduction to Tax Policy Design and Development', Draft Prepared for a Course on Practical Issues of Tax Policy in Developing Countries, World Bank, Washington D.C.
Author:
Eric M. Zolt
, zolt@law.ucla.edu