More than Revenue: Taxation as a Development Tool
01 02 Taxation in Latin America is largely viewed as a means of generating income to keep the government in business. In recent years, progress has been made towards increasing total revenue, but most countries in the region still lag well behind other countries with similar levels of development. M...
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creator | Bank, Inter-American Development Corbacho, Ana Cibils, Vicente Fretes Lora, Eduardo |
description | 01
02
Taxation in Latin America is largely viewed as a means of generating income to keep the government in business. In recent years, progress has been made towards increasing total revenue, but most countries in the region still lag well behind other countries with similar levels of development. More importantly, Latin American policymakers still largely ignore the potential of taxation to contribute to other important development goals. Yet dependence on consumption taxes such as the VAT and the regressive bent of the personal income tax structure have squandered the opportunity to attack the region's serious income inequality. In addition, the importance of efficiency in taxation has also been underestimated with a proliferation of inefficient ad hoc taxes such as those on bank transactions and exports. Governments have repeatedly missed the chance to influence consumption and production patterns by using taxes to effect relative price changes. More than Revenue aims to provide an up-to-date overview of the current state of taxation in the Latin America and Caribbean (LAC) region, its main reform needs, and possible reform strategies that take into account the likely economic, institutional, and political constraints on the reform process.
02
02
This exciting new volume provides an up-to-date overview of the current state of taxation in the Latin America and Caribbean (LAC) region, its main reform needs, and possible reform strategies that take into account the likely economic, institutional, and political constraints on the reform process.
31
02
Provides an up-to-date overview of the current state of taxation in the Latin America and Caribbean (LAC) region.
04
02
PART I: OVERVIEW PART II: GENERAL TOPICS Where We Are and How We Got Here: Stylized Facts of Taxation in LAC The Political Economy of Taxation and Tax Reforms Taxation and Stabilization Labor Effects of Taxation Sub-National Taxation Tax and Customs Administration: Progress to Date and Challenges Ahead PART III: SPECIFIC TAXES: CHALLENGES AND POLICY OPTIONS Personal Income Taxes Corporate Income Taxes Value-Added Taxes Non-Renewable Resource Revenues Environmental Taxes The Perils of Expediency
13
02
The IDB is an international institution created in 1959 to foster economic and social development in Latin America and the Caribbean. It is the main source of multilateral financing and expertise for sustainable economic, social, and institutional development in Latin America and the Caribbean.
A |
doi_str_mv | 10.1057/9781137315977 |
format | Book |
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02
Taxation in Latin America is largely viewed as a means of generating income to keep the government in business. In recent years, progress has been made towards increasing total revenue, but most countries in the region still lag well behind other countries with similar levels of development. More importantly, Latin American policymakers still largely ignore the potential of taxation to contribute to other important development goals. Yet dependence on consumption taxes such as the VAT and the regressive bent of the personal income tax structure have squandered the opportunity to attack the region's serious income inequality. In addition, the importance of efficiency in taxation has also been underestimated with a proliferation of inefficient ad hoc taxes such as those on bank transactions and exports. Governments have repeatedly missed the chance to influence consumption and production patterns by using taxes to effect relative price changes. More than Revenue aims to provide an up-to-date overview of the current state of taxation in the Latin America and Caribbean (LAC) region, its main reform needs, and possible reform strategies that take into account the likely economic, institutional, and political constraints on the reform process.
02
02
This exciting new volume provides an up-to-date overview of the current state of taxation in the Latin America and Caribbean (LAC) region, its main reform needs, and possible reform strategies that take into account the likely economic, institutional, and political constraints on the reform process.
31
02
Provides an up-to-date overview of the current state of taxation in the Latin America and Caribbean (LAC) region.
04
02
PART I: OVERVIEW PART II: GENERAL TOPICS Where We Are and How We Got Here: Stylized Facts of Taxation in LAC The Political Economy of Taxation and Tax Reforms Taxation and Stabilization Labor Effects of Taxation Sub-National Taxation Tax and Customs Administration: Progress to Date and Challenges Ahead PART III: SPECIFIC TAXES: CHALLENGES AND POLICY OPTIONS Personal Income Taxes Corporate Income Taxes Value-Added Taxes Non-Renewable Resource Revenues Environmental Taxes The Perils of Expediency
13
02
The IDB is an international institution created in 1959 to foster economic and social development in Latin America and the Caribbean. It is the main source of multilateral financing and expertise for sustainable economic, social, and institutional development in Latin America and the Caribbean.
ANA CORBACHO is the Sector Economic Advisor for the Institutions in Development Sector at the IDB. Previously, she was at the IMF where she began as a desk economist for Bulgaria and a fiscal economist for Honduras. She quickly rose through the Fiscal Affairs Department and was eventually named Deputy Division Chief of the Western Hemisphere Department. Her areas of expertise include macroeconomic and fiscal policy analysis, fiscal institutions and public infrastructure financing, and household survey analysis, poverty, and income distribution. She holds a Ph.D. in Economics and a master of philosophy from Columbia University and a licentiate in Economics from the Universidad de San Andres. She has received numerous honors and fellowships including merit scholarships as the Columbia President's Fellow, Public Policy Consortium Fellow, Bradley Foundation Fellow, and Organization of American States Fellow. VICENTE FRETES CIBILS joined the IDB in 2007 and is currently a Division Chief of Fiscal and Municipal Management in the Sector of Institutions for Development. Previously, he worked at the World Bank. Following stints in the Office of the Vice President for Europe and the Middle East and its Treasury Department, he served from 1988 to 1992 as Economist in the Office of the Vice President for West Africa Operations. From 1992 to 1996, he served as Chief Economist in the Department of Operations for Andean Countries, supervising adjustment programs and heading up economic analytical missions to Bolivia. From 1996 to 2002, he served as Senior Economist for the República Bolivariana de Venezuela, and subsequently for Colombia and Mexico. From 2002 to 2007 he was Lead Economist in the Poverty Reduction and Economic Management sector for the Andean Countries Department. He has also taught at Argentina's Universidad Nacional del Nordeste and at North Carolina State University, and has published numerous works addressing topics in finance, applied econometrics, public finance, international economics, and economic development. He completed his undergraduate work at the Universidad Nacional del Nordeste in Argentina and pursued postgraduate studies at the University of Pennsylvania and North Carolina State University, where he received, respectively, a master's degree in business administration and a PhD in economics. EDUARDO LORA served as Chief Economist and Manager of the IDB's Research Department from 2008 to 2012 and as Senior Economist and Principal Advisor from 1996 to 2008. Previously, he was executive director of Fedesarrollo, the leading economic think-tank in Colombia. He is also editor of Vox.Lacea, an elected member of the executive board of Lacea, and a regular columnist for Dinero magazine in Colombia. He has been the author or editor of over 30 books, 5 textbooks, and 5 issues of the flagship publication of the IDB. He holds an undergraduate degree in Economics from the Universidad Nacional de Colombia and a Master of Science degree in Economics from the LSE. He has received various academic and professional awards, including the title of 'Distinguished Alumnus' of the LSE and the Simón Bolivar Fellowship of the British Council.
19
02
COMPREHENSIVE: Acknowledges that in taxation, as in other economic aspects, the LAC region is very diverse and that there are no one-size-fits-all prescriptions. As such, the book focuses on aspects of taxation that apply to a number of countries in the region. HOT TOPIC: Taxation is heavily discussed both in academia and in the general media. PRESCRIPTIVE: Offers real-world solutions, including the strengthening of PITs through the adoption of a dual rate structure; broadening the VAT base; reducing tax expenditures, with a view to promoting domestic and FDI; eliminating energy subsidies and considering the introduction or increase in environmental taxes; revising revenue assignments to regional governments, with a view to reducing their dependence on central government transfers; promoting and assisting efforts by local governments to improve the collection of property taxes; and reforming especially distortive sub-national taxes.</description><edition>1</edition><identifier>ISBN: 1137315970</identifier><identifier>ISBN: 9781137315977</identifier><identifier>ISBN: 9781137294838</identifier><identifier>ISBN: 1137294833</identifier><identifier>ISBN: 1137294841</identifier><identifier>ISBN: 9781137294845</identifier><identifier>EISBN: 1137315970</identifier><identifier>EISBN: 9781137315977</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.1057/9781137315977</identifier><identifier>OCLC: 834097170</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>New York: Palgrave Macmillan</publisher><subject>21st century ; Business ; BUSINESS & ECONOMICS ; Business and Management ; Business enterprises ; Business Finance ; Caribbean Area ; Economic development ; Economic Policy ; Finance ; Finance, general ; Finance, Public ; Fiscal policy ; General Finance ; International Political Economy ; Monetary and Fiscal Policy ; Money, Banking and Finance ; Palgrave Economics & Finance Collection ; Political Economy ; Public Administration, Management and Policy ; Public Finance ; Public Policy ; Taxation ; Taxation/General ; The Americas ; Welfare and Public Sector Economics</subject><creationdate>2013</creationdate><tpages>336</tpages><format>336</format><rights>Palgrave Macmillan, a division of Nature America Inc. 2013</rights><woscitedreferencessubscribed>false</woscitedreferencessubscribed><relation>SpringerLink</relation></display><links><openurl>$$Topenurl_article</openurl><openurlfulltext>$$Topenurlfull_article</openurlfulltext><thumbnail>$$Uhttps://media.springernature.com/w306/springer-static/cover-hires/book/978-1-137-31597-7</thumbnail><linktohtml>$$Uhttps://link.springer.com/10.1057/9781137315977$$EHTML$$P50$$Gspringer$$H</linktohtml><link.rule.ids>306,780,784,786,24780,27925,38255,42511</link.rule.ids></links><search><contributor>Ana Corbacho</contributor><contributor>Inter-American Development Bank</contributor><contributor>Vicente Fretes Cibils</contributor><contributor>Eduardo Lora</contributor><contributor>Corbacho, Ana</contributor><contributor>Cibils, Vicente Fretes</contributor><contributor>Lora, Eduardo</contributor><creatorcontrib>Bank, Inter-American Development</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Corbacho, Ana</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Cibils, Vicente Fretes</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Lora, Eduardo</creatorcontrib><title>More than Revenue: Taxation as a Development Tool</title><description>01
02
Taxation in Latin America is largely viewed as a means of generating income to keep the government in business. In recent years, progress has been made towards increasing total revenue, but most countries in the region still lag well behind other countries with similar levels of development. More importantly, Latin American policymakers still largely ignore the potential of taxation to contribute to other important development goals. Yet dependence on consumption taxes such as the VAT and the regressive bent of the personal income tax structure have squandered the opportunity to attack the region's serious income inequality. In addition, the importance of efficiency in taxation has also been underestimated with a proliferation of inefficient ad hoc taxes such as those on bank transactions and exports. Governments have repeatedly missed the chance to influence consumption and production patterns by using taxes to effect relative price changes. More than Revenue aims to provide an up-to-date overview of the current state of taxation in the Latin America and Caribbean (LAC) region, its main reform needs, and possible reform strategies that take into account the likely economic, institutional, and political constraints on the reform process.
02
02
This exciting new volume provides an up-to-date overview of the current state of taxation in the Latin America and Caribbean (LAC) region, its main reform needs, and possible reform strategies that take into account the likely economic, institutional, and political constraints on the reform process.
31
02
Provides an up-to-date overview of the current state of taxation in the Latin America and Caribbean (LAC) region.
04
02
PART I: OVERVIEW PART II: GENERAL TOPICS Where We Are and How We Got Here: Stylized Facts of Taxation in LAC The Political Economy of Taxation and Tax Reforms Taxation and Stabilization Labor Effects of Taxation Sub-National Taxation Tax and Customs Administration: Progress to Date and Challenges Ahead PART III: SPECIFIC TAXES: CHALLENGES AND POLICY OPTIONS Personal Income Taxes Corporate Income Taxes Value-Added Taxes Non-Renewable Resource Revenues Environmental Taxes The Perils of Expediency
13
02
The IDB is an international institution created in 1959 to foster economic and social development in Latin America and the Caribbean. It is the main source of multilateral financing and expertise for sustainable economic, social, and institutional development in Latin America and the Caribbean.
ANA CORBACHO is the Sector Economic Advisor for the Institutions in Development Sector at the IDB. Previously, she was at the IMF where she began as a desk economist for Bulgaria and a fiscal economist for Honduras. She quickly rose through the Fiscal Affairs Department and was eventually named Deputy Division Chief of the Western Hemisphere Department. Her areas of expertise include macroeconomic and fiscal policy analysis, fiscal institutions and public infrastructure financing, and household survey analysis, poverty, and income distribution. She holds a Ph.D. in Economics and a master of philosophy from Columbia University and a licentiate in Economics from the Universidad de San Andres. She has received numerous honors and fellowships including merit scholarships as the Columbia President's Fellow, Public Policy Consortium Fellow, Bradley Foundation Fellow, and Organization of American States Fellow. VICENTE FRETES CIBILS joined the IDB in 2007 and is currently a Division Chief of Fiscal and Municipal Management in the Sector of Institutions for Development. Previously, he worked at the World Bank. Following stints in the Office of the Vice President for Europe and the Middle East and its Treasury Department, he served from 1988 to 1992 as Economist in the Office of the Vice President for West Africa Operations. From 1992 to 1996, he served as Chief Economist in the Department of Operations for Andean Countries, supervising adjustment programs and heading up economic analytical missions to Bolivia. From 1996 to 2002, he served as Senior Economist for the República Bolivariana de Venezuela, and subsequently for Colombia and Mexico. From 2002 to 2007 he was Lead Economist in the Poverty Reduction and Economic Management sector for the Andean Countries Department. He has also taught at Argentina's Universidad Nacional del Nordeste and at North Carolina State University, and has published numerous works addressing topics in finance, applied econometrics, public finance, international economics, and economic development. He completed his undergraduate work at the Universidad Nacional del Nordeste in Argentina and pursued postgraduate studies at the University of Pennsylvania and North Carolina State University, where he received, respectively, a master's degree in business administration and a PhD in economics. EDUARDO LORA served as Chief Economist and Manager of the IDB's Research Department from 2008 to 2012 and as Senior Economist and Principal Advisor from 1996 to 2008. Previously, he was executive director of Fedesarrollo, the leading economic think-tank in Colombia. He is also editor of Vox.Lacea, an elected member of the executive board of Lacea, and a regular columnist for Dinero magazine in Colombia. He has been the author or editor of over 30 books, 5 textbooks, and 5 issues of the flagship publication of the IDB. He holds an undergraduate degree in Economics from the Universidad Nacional de Colombia and a Master of Science degree in Economics from the LSE. He has received various academic and professional awards, including the title of 'Distinguished Alumnus' of the LSE and the Simón Bolivar Fellowship of the British Council.
19
02
COMPREHENSIVE: Acknowledges that in taxation, as in other economic aspects, the LAC region is very diverse and that there are no one-size-fits-all prescriptions. As such, the book focuses on aspects of taxation that apply to a number of countries in the region. HOT TOPIC: Taxation is heavily discussed both in academia and in the general media. PRESCRIPTIVE: Offers real-world solutions, including the strengthening of PITs through the adoption of a dual rate structure; broadening the VAT base; reducing tax expenditures, with a view to promoting domestic and FDI; eliminating energy subsidies and considering the introduction or increase in environmental taxes; revising revenue assignments to regional governments, with a view to reducing their dependence on central government transfers; promoting and assisting efforts by local governments to improve the collection of property taxes; and reforming especially distortive sub-national taxes.</description><subject>21st century</subject><subject>Business</subject><subject>BUSINESS & ECONOMICS</subject><subject>Business and Management</subject><subject>Business enterprises</subject><subject>Business Finance</subject><subject>Caribbean Area</subject><subject>Economic development</subject><subject>Economic Policy</subject><subject>Finance</subject><subject>Finance, general</subject><subject>Finance, Public</subject><subject>Fiscal policy</subject><subject>General Finance</subject><subject>International Political Economy</subject><subject>Monetary and Fiscal Policy</subject><subject>Money, Banking and Finance</subject><subject>Palgrave Economics & Finance Collection</subject><subject>Political Economy</subject><subject>Public Administration, Management and Policy</subject><subject>Public Finance</subject><subject>Public Policy</subject><subject>Taxation</subject><subject>Taxation/General</subject><subject>The Americas</subject><subject>Welfare and Public Sector Economics</subject><isbn>1137315970</isbn><isbn>9781137315977</isbn><isbn>9781137294838</isbn><isbn>1137294833</isbn><isbn>1137294841</isbn><isbn>9781137294845</isbn><isbn>1137315970</isbn><isbn>9781137315977</isbn><fulltext>true</fulltext><rsrctype>book</rsrctype><creationdate>2013</creationdate><recordtype>book</recordtype><recordid>eNplkM1Lw0AQxVdEsdYePHjz0JuIVHcyu9nkqKV-QEUQ8bpskklbG5O6m0b8792aIBXn8ni8H2-YYewE-CVwqa5iFQGgQpCxUjvs8Nfw3W2zz3oRCh4rUPyADZx7435ikBziHjt-rCwN67kph8_UULmmI7aXm8LRoNM-e72dvIzvR9Onu4fx9XRkAiUDPoKES6EoN5hmaESyUaJQKp7KPAkSwgTTSFFGPI5EnoUgwtiYALPcuyDDPjtvi41b0qebV0XtdFNQUlVLp_9c59lhy1JalQunV3bxbuyXBr9PRKik8MhFizgfljOyui0Crjfv-ld41tIrW32sydX6Z29KZW1NoSc3Y4AQMOSePO1IsgXNqq4WRRQKjluxKWbWNNTloZAYRPgNTmh14Q</recordid><startdate>2013</startdate><enddate>2013</enddate><creator>Bank, Inter-American Development</creator><creator>Corbacho, Ana</creator><creator>Cibils, Vicente Fretes</creator><creator>Lora, Eduardo</creator><general>Palgrave Macmillan</general><general>Palgrave Macmillan US</general><scope>YSPEL</scope><scope>OQ6</scope></search><sort><creationdate>2013</creationdate><title>More than Revenue</title><author>Bank, Inter-American Development ; Corbacho, Ana ; Cibils, Vicente Fretes ; Lora, Eduardo</author></sort><facets><frbrtype>5</frbrtype><frbrgroupid>cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-a27520-1b0547efa3cd3a4ba3cdee6570c5fb2be3b3c87ede0984fd61469aa23df4fd2d3</frbrgroupid><rsrctype>books</rsrctype><prefilter>books</prefilter><language>eng</language><creationdate>2013</creationdate><topic>21st century</topic><topic>Business</topic><topic>BUSINESS & ECONOMICS</topic><topic>Business and Management</topic><topic>Business enterprises</topic><topic>Business Finance</topic><topic>Caribbean Area</topic><topic>Economic development</topic><topic>Economic Policy</topic><topic>Finance</topic><topic>Finance, general</topic><topic>Finance, Public</topic><topic>Fiscal policy</topic><topic>General Finance</topic><topic>International Political Economy</topic><topic>Monetary and Fiscal Policy</topic><topic>Money, Banking and Finance</topic><topic>Palgrave Economics & Finance Collection</topic><topic>Political Economy</topic><topic>Public Administration, Management and Policy</topic><topic>Public Finance</topic><topic>Public Policy</topic><topic>Taxation</topic><topic>Taxation/General</topic><topic>The Americas</topic><topic>Welfare and Public Sector Economics</topic><toplevel>online_resources</toplevel><creatorcontrib>Bank, Inter-American Development</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Corbacho, Ana</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Cibils, Vicente Fretes</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Lora, Eduardo</creatorcontrib><collection>Perlego</collection><collection>ECONIS</collection></facets><delivery><delcategory>Remote Search Resource</delcategory><fulltext>fulltext</fulltext></delivery><addata><au>Bank, Inter-American Development</au><au>Corbacho, Ana</au><au>Cibils, Vicente Fretes</au><au>Lora, Eduardo</au><au>Ana Corbacho</au><au>Inter-American Development Bank</au><au>Vicente Fretes Cibils</au><au>Eduardo Lora</au><au>Corbacho, Ana</au><au>Cibils, Vicente Fretes</au><au>Lora, Eduardo</au><format>book</format><genre>book</genre><ristype>BOOK</ristype><btitle>More than Revenue: Taxation as a Development Tool</btitle><seriestitle>SpringerLink</seriestitle><date>2013</date><risdate>2013</risdate><isbn>1137315970</isbn><isbn>9781137315977</isbn><isbn>9781137294838</isbn><isbn>1137294833</isbn><isbn>1137294841</isbn><isbn>9781137294845</isbn><eisbn>1137315970</eisbn><eisbn>9781137315977</eisbn><abstract>01
02
Taxation in Latin America is largely viewed as a means of generating income to keep the government in business. In recent years, progress has been made towards increasing total revenue, but most countries in the region still lag well behind other countries with similar levels of development. More importantly, Latin American policymakers still largely ignore the potential of taxation to contribute to other important development goals. Yet dependence on consumption taxes such as the VAT and the regressive bent of the personal income tax structure have squandered the opportunity to attack the region's serious income inequality. In addition, the importance of efficiency in taxation has also been underestimated with a proliferation of inefficient ad hoc taxes such as those on bank transactions and exports. Governments have repeatedly missed the chance to influence consumption and production patterns by using taxes to effect relative price changes. More than Revenue aims to provide an up-to-date overview of the current state of taxation in the Latin America and Caribbean (LAC) region, its main reform needs, and possible reform strategies that take into account the likely economic, institutional, and political constraints on the reform process.
02
02
This exciting new volume provides an up-to-date overview of the current state of taxation in the Latin America and Caribbean (LAC) region, its main reform needs, and possible reform strategies that take into account the likely economic, institutional, and political constraints on the reform process.
31
02
Provides an up-to-date overview of the current state of taxation in the Latin America and Caribbean (LAC) region.
04
02
PART I: OVERVIEW PART II: GENERAL TOPICS Where We Are and How We Got Here: Stylized Facts of Taxation in LAC The Political Economy of Taxation and Tax Reforms Taxation and Stabilization Labor Effects of Taxation Sub-National Taxation Tax and Customs Administration: Progress to Date and Challenges Ahead PART III: SPECIFIC TAXES: CHALLENGES AND POLICY OPTIONS Personal Income Taxes Corporate Income Taxes Value-Added Taxes Non-Renewable Resource Revenues Environmental Taxes The Perils of Expediency
13
02
The IDB is an international institution created in 1959 to foster economic and social development in Latin America and the Caribbean. It is the main source of multilateral financing and expertise for sustainable economic, social, and institutional development in Latin America and the Caribbean.
ANA CORBACHO is the Sector Economic Advisor for the Institutions in Development Sector at the IDB. Previously, she was at the IMF where she began as a desk economist for Bulgaria and a fiscal economist for Honduras. She quickly rose through the Fiscal Affairs Department and was eventually named Deputy Division Chief of the Western Hemisphere Department. Her areas of expertise include macroeconomic and fiscal policy analysis, fiscal institutions and public infrastructure financing, and household survey analysis, poverty, and income distribution. She holds a Ph.D. in Economics and a master of philosophy from Columbia University and a licentiate in Economics from the Universidad de San Andres. She has received numerous honors and fellowships including merit scholarships as the Columbia President's Fellow, Public Policy Consortium Fellow, Bradley Foundation Fellow, and Organization of American States Fellow. VICENTE FRETES CIBILS joined the IDB in 2007 and is currently a Division Chief of Fiscal and Municipal Management in the Sector of Institutions for Development. Previously, he worked at the World Bank. Following stints in the Office of the Vice President for Europe and the Middle East and its Treasury Department, he served from 1988 to 1992 as Economist in the Office of the Vice President for West Africa Operations. From 1992 to 1996, he served as Chief Economist in the Department of Operations for Andean Countries, supervising adjustment programs and heading up economic analytical missions to Bolivia. From 1996 to 2002, he served as Senior Economist for the República Bolivariana de Venezuela, and subsequently for Colombia and Mexico. From 2002 to 2007 he was Lead Economist in the Poverty Reduction and Economic Management sector for the Andean Countries Department. He has also taught at Argentina's Universidad Nacional del Nordeste and at North Carolina State University, and has published numerous works addressing topics in finance, applied econometrics, public finance, international economics, and economic development. He completed his undergraduate work at the Universidad Nacional del Nordeste in Argentina and pursued postgraduate studies at the University of Pennsylvania and North Carolina State University, where he received, respectively, a master's degree in business administration and a PhD in economics. EDUARDO LORA served as Chief Economist and Manager of the IDB's Research Department from 2008 to 2012 and as Senior Economist and Principal Advisor from 1996 to 2008. Previously, he was executive director of Fedesarrollo, the leading economic think-tank in Colombia. He is also editor of Vox.Lacea, an elected member of the executive board of Lacea, and a regular columnist for Dinero magazine in Colombia. He has been the author or editor of over 30 books, 5 textbooks, and 5 issues of the flagship publication of the IDB. He holds an undergraduate degree in Economics from the Universidad Nacional de Colombia and a Master of Science degree in Economics from the LSE. He has received various academic and professional awards, including the title of 'Distinguished Alumnus' of the LSE and the Simón Bolivar Fellowship of the British Council.
19
02
COMPREHENSIVE: Acknowledges that in taxation, as in other economic aspects, the LAC region is very diverse and that there are no one-size-fits-all prescriptions. As such, the book focuses on aspects of taxation that apply to a number of countries in the region. HOT TOPIC: Taxation is heavily discussed both in academia and in the general media. PRESCRIPTIVE: Offers real-world solutions, including the strengthening of PITs through the adoption of a dual rate structure; broadening the VAT base; reducing tax expenditures, with a view to promoting domestic and FDI; eliminating energy subsidies and considering the introduction or increase in environmental taxes; revising revenue assignments to regional governments, with a view to reducing their dependence on central government transfers; promoting and assisting efforts by local governments to improve the collection of property taxes; and reforming especially distortive sub-national taxes.</abstract><cop>New York</cop><pub>Palgrave Macmillan</pub><doi>10.1057/9781137315977</doi><oclcid>834097170</oclcid><tpages>336</tpages><edition>1</edition></addata></record> |
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subjects | 21st century Business BUSINESS & ECONOMICS Business and Management Business enterprises Business Finance Caribbean Area Economic development Economic Policy Finance Finance, general Finance, Public Fiscal policy General Finance International Political Economy Monetary and Fiscal Policy Money, Banking and Finance Palgrave Economics & Finance Collection Political Economy Public Administration, Management and Policy Public Finance Public Policy Taxation Taxation/General The Americas Welfare and Public Sector Economics |
title | More than Revenue: Taxation as a Development Tool |
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