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Research Article

Tax evasion from cross-border fraud: does digitalization make a difference?

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ABSTRACT

How can governments reduce the prevalence of cross-border tax fraud? This paper argues that the use of digital technologies offers an opportunity to reduce fraud and increase government revenue. Using data on intra-EU and world trade transactions, we present evidence that (i) cross-border trade tax fraud is non-trivial and prevalent in many countries; (ii) such fraud can be alleviated by the use of digital technologies at the border; and (iii) potential revenue gains of digitalization from reducing trade fraud could be substantial. Halving the distance to the digitalization frontier could raise revenues by over 1.5% of GDP in low-income developing countries.

JEL CLASSIFICATION:

Acknowledgments

The authors thank one anonymous referee for useful comments. The usual disclaimer applies and any remaining errors are the authors´ own responsibility. Prof. Jalles acknowledges financial Support from FCT – Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia (Portugal), national funding through research grant UIDB/05069/2020. The opinions expressed herein are those of the authors and not necessarily those of their employers.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Notes

2 Studies examining the impact of sector specific tariff rates on trade fraud relied on disaggregated industry-by-industry measures of trade misreporting (see e.g. Javorcik and Narciso Citation2008; Mishra, Subramanian, and Topalova Citation2008;; Jean and Mitaritonna Citation2010).

3 The trade gap as defined can have a maximum value of 2 and a minimum value of – 2. Estimations are robust to the exclusion of such extreme values.

4 It is significantly correlated to other digitalization indices available and has broader sample coverage across countries and over time compared to WB’s Digital Adoption Index and WEF’s Government Success in ICT Promotion.

5 This instrumental variable is positively and strongly correlated to the endogenous digitalization index both for importers and exporters (columns 2 and 3). The exclusion restriction relies on the assumption that the trade gap itself is not correlated with differences in the instruments once macro-variables are explicitly controlled for.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia.

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