NATIONAL BUREAU OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH
NATIONAL BUREAU OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH

Puzzling Tax Structures in Developing Countries: A Comparison of Two Alternative Explanations

Roger Gordon, Wei Li

NBER Working Paper No. 11661*
Issued in October 2005
NBER Program(s):   PE

Observed economic policies in developing countries differ sharply both from those observed among developed countries and from those forecast by existing models of optimal policies. For example, developing countries rely little on broad-based taxes, and make substantial use of tariffs and seignorage as nontax sources of revenue.

The objective of this paper is to contrast the implications of two models designed to explain such anomalous policies. One approach, by Gordon-Li (2005), focuses on the greater difficulties faced in poor countries in monitoring taxable activity, and explores the best available policies given such difficulties. The other, building on Grossman-Helpman (1994), presumes that political-economy problems in developing countries are worse, leading to worse policy choices. The paper compares the contrasting theoretical implications of the two models with the data, and finds that the political-economy approach does poorly in reconciling many aspects of the data with the theory. In contrast, the forecasts from Gordon-Li model are largely consistent with the data currently available.

*Published: This paper was subsequently published as Puzzling Tax Structures in Devloping Countries: A Comparison of Two Alternative Explanations, Roger Gordon, Wei Li, in NBER book Fiscal Policy and Management in East Asia, NBER-EASE, Volume 16 (2007)

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