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Articles

Assessing Revenue Authority Performance in Developing Countries: A Synthetic Control Approach

 

ABSTRACT

In many developing countries, comprehensive reforms have been undertaken in tax administration during recent years and the implementation of semiautonomous revenue authorities (SARAs) constitutes one of their most visible expressions. To date, no comprehensive assessment has been undertaken to investigate how successful these SARAs have been in improving revenue collection in these countries. Therefore, this article attempts to fill this gap by assessing revenue collection trends in 20 developing countries after the SARA has been implemented. Using the synthetic control method, we show that in most countries, the implementation of a SARA did not significantly improve government revenues.

Notes

1 For a comprehensive literature on NPM, see for instance Pollitt (1993) and Manning (Citation2001).

2 See for a complete list of countries having established a SARA.

3 Color revolutions make reference to the Serbian Bulldozer revolution (2000), the Georgian Rose revolution (2003), the Ukrainian Orange revolution (2004), and the Kyrgyz Tulip revolution (2005).

4 To construct this sample, we started by including all developing countries and then excluded countries for which there are no complete longitudinal series on government revenue. See the and A.2 for the list of countries.

5 SARAer refers to the treated country, i.e., country with a SARA.

6 See (Appendix section) for the Annual Average Impact by country.

7 Taliercio (Citation2004) analyzes revenues authorities in six countries: Kenya, Mexico, Peru, South Africa, Venezuela, and Uganda. He looks at the degree of autonomy and its impact on tax collection. Revenue Authorities in Kenya, Peru, and South Africa were more autonomous and seemed to be more effective in increasing tax revenue. But his analysis did not take into account other exogenous factors that can affect tax revenue.

8 “Creating a SARA is clearly expensive, may take a long time and require significant effort, and does not actually improve tax administration effectiveness” Kidd and Crandall (Citation2006, p. 53).

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