Learning from the 'Best': The Impact of Tax-Benefit Systems in Africa

O. Bargain, Holguer Xavier Jara Tamayo, Prudence Kwenda, Miracle Ntuli
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Redistributive systems in Africa are still in their infancy but are constantly expanding in order to finance increasing public spending. This paper aims at characterizing the redistributive potential of six African countries: Ghana, Zambia, Mozambique, Tanzania, Ethiopia and South Africa. These countries show contrasted situations in terms of income distribution. We assess the role of tax-benefit systems to explain these differences. Using newly developed tax-benefit microsimulations for all six countries, we produce counterfactual simulations whereby the system of the most (least) redistributive country is applied to the population of all other countries. In this way, we can decompose the total country difference in income distribution between the contribution of tax-benefit policies versus the contribution of other factors (market income distributions, demographics, etc.). This analysis contributes to the recent literature on the redistributive role of socio-fiscal policies in developing countries and highlights the role of microsimulation techniques to characterize how different African countries can learn from each other to improve social protection and reduce inequality.
向“最好的”学习:税收-福利制度在非洲的影响
非洲的再分配制度仍处于初级阶段,但正在不断扩大,以便为不断增加的公共开支提供资金。本文旨在描述六个非洲国家的再分配潜力:加纳、赞比亚、莫桑比克、坦桑尼亚、埃塞俄比亚和南非。这些国家在收入分配方面表现出截然不同的情况。我们评估了税收-福利制度的作用,以解释这些差异。使用新开发的所有六个国家的税收-福利微观模拟,我们产生反事实模拟,其中最(最少)再分配国家的系统适用于所有其他国家的人口。通过这种方式,我们可以分解税收优惠政策的贡献与其他因素(市场收入分配、人口统计等)的贡献之间的收入分配的总国家差异。这一分析有助于最近关于发展中国家社会财政政策的再分配作用的文献,并强调了微观模拟技术在描述不同非洲国家如何相互学习以改善社会保护和减少不平等方面的作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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