informal taxation in sierra leone
DESCRIPTION
This research evolved out of an understanding that in low-income and post-conflict areas, and particularly rural areas, citizens pay a wide range of “taxes” that often differ substantially than what may be statutorily mandated. These non-statutory payments, whether paid to state or non-state actors, are referred to here as informal taxes. Informal state taxes can take a range of forms, including bribes, extortions and goodwill payments. Informal non-state taxes are generally conceived as being either coercive or voluntary in nature, or existing somewhere along coercive-quasi-voluntary spectrum. On the quasi-voluntary end of this spectrum, informal taxes can take the form of community levies, with payments made to community groups, self-help groups, traditional or chiefly institutions or other autonomous governing structures with the aim of providing public services. On the coercive end of the spectrum, informal taxes may take more obviously exploitative forms, including payments made to insurgent groups, warlords or vigilante groups in exchange for security or “protection.” While we differentiate between these different types of payments, we have intentionally left the definition of informal tax broad enough in order to fully capture the range of taxes and payments made by citizens, which will help us to better understand the basis of post-conflict taxation, service delivery, and governance in these areas. These informal taxes, while often making up a substantial proportion of the taxes paid by individuals and households, are frequently overlooked in policy and academic analyses of taxation and public service delivery. We see this as problematic. Focusing only on “formal” taxation can lead to misunderstanding of effective local tax burdens, and their impact on livelihoods and the fairness of distribution, as well as of public goods provision and local governance more broadly. Accordingly, at its most basic level, our research aims simply to capture the prevalence of both formal and informal taxes in these post-conflict areas, and how they’re perceived by citizen-taxpayers. In so doing, we aim to capture the real, rather than idealized, systems of tax and governance that define post-conflict service delivery, and that are deeply linked to distributive justice and equality in post-conflict areas. The three primary objectiveTRANSCRIPT
Informal taxation and service delivery in post-
conflict Sierra Leone Samuel Jibao
Director, Centre for Economic Research and Capacity Building
Wilson Prichard Research Director, International Centre for Tax and Development and Assistant Professor,
University of Toronto
Vanessa van den Boogaard Research Officer, International Centre for Tax and Development and PhD Candidate,
University of Toronto
2 September 2014, Colombo CEPA and SLRC 13th Annual Symposium on Post-war Development in Asia and Africa
Outline
Methods Findings Implications
Research methods
Methods Findings Implications
Research methods
• 1129 taxpayer survey • +/-10% confidence
interval • 95% confidence level
• In-depth interviews
• Focus group discussions
Research methods
Background
Key Findings
Methods Findings Implications
1. Prevalence of informal taxation
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
Private development taxes Taxes to CBOs
Informal user fees to schools Payments to secret societies
Payments to trade associations Payments to religious groups
Informal payments to chief Labour services to chief
Informal taxes to army/police Sales tax
Business licenses Market dues
Local tax User fees schools/clinics
Proportion of households paying each tax in the previous year
1. Prevalence of informal taxation
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
Mean number of taxes paid annually
Mean annual tax expenditure (USD)
Formal state taxes Informal state taxes Chiefdom taxes Non-state taxes
2a. Taxpayer perceptions: Fairness
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
Formal state taxes
Informal state taxes
Chiefdom taxes
Non-state taxes
Mean proportion of respondents believing that…
…the tax rate is reasonable/would be willing to pay a higher rate
…the tax is fairly applied and collected
…everyone pays their fair share of the tax that should do so
2b. Taxpayer perceptions: Transparency
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
Formal state taxes
Informal state taxes
Chiefdom taxes
Non-state taxes
Mean proportion of respondents reporting that…
…they understand how the tax rate is set
…it is easy to find out how revenues from this tax are used
2c. Taxpayer perceptions: Fiscal exchange
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
Formal state taxes
Informal state taxes
Chiefdom taxes
Non-state taxes
What is the primary good/service you get in return for making this payment?
Don't know
Security
Financing of legitimate salaries and general activites of government/actor/organization, but not specific services A specific service/good in the community
Avoidance of harassment/stress/hassle
No service
2d. Taxpayer perceptions: Accountability
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
Formal state taxes
Informal state taxes
Chiefdom taxes
Non-state taxes
Do you think that the actor collecting this tax uses it to benefit the community most, some or none of the time?
Don't know
Most of the time
Some of the time
None of the time
Implications
Methods Findings Implications
Implications and areas for further research
• Thinking about informality
• Tax and service delivery methods
• Role of chiefs in tax and service delivery
• Taxpayer confidence in formal tax system
Thank you! Discussion and questions
Methods Findings Implications