Kingsley Aderemi Adeyemo, I. Adeyanju, Gbenga Ekundayo, Alex Adegboye, Shahnawaz Ali
{"title":"Financial Inclusion and Information Communication Technology on Tax Performance in Sub-Saharan Africa","authors":"Kingsley Aderemi Adeyemo, I. Adeyanju, Gbenga Ekundayo, Alex Adegboye, Shahnawaz Ali","doi":"10.26668/businessreview/2023.v8i12.2341","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Purpose: The main objective of this paper is to determine empirically the impact of financial inclusion and Information Communication Technology (ICT) on tax performance in Sub-Saharan African countries; determine the extent to which the elements of financial inclusion have influenced tax performance of countries in Sub-Saharan Africa; and examine the role technology plays in impacting the performance of taxes in Sub-Saharan African countries.\n \nTheoretical Framework: The existing theories that serve as a roadmap for the development of this study are Theory of Digital Diffusion and Theory of Margins. Digital transformation has an important impact on the operations and systems of every economy, which often triggers a positive effect on taxes. Diffusion innovation theory was initiated by Rogers in 1962. The Theory of Margin on the other hand, is a theoretical school that gives validity to the impact of financial development on product output. It suggests that more access to financial services and products is vital for high output and economic advancement.\n \nDesign/Methodology/Approach: The population considered in this study was 48 sub-Saharan African Countries from the period of 1999 to 2019. The methods used for the analysis consists of the descriptive and correlation analysis on the identified variables and a creation of financial inclusion index using the Principal Component Analysis to deal with multiclonality challenge amongst the financial inclusion proxies, it also adopted the two-staged least square estimation technique for the empirical analysis.\n \nFindings: The study reveals inter alia that the variables for financial inclusion and ICT proxies are overwhelmingly positive and significantly impact on the tax performance (i.e., total tax revenue and the non-resource tax revenue as percentages of GDP), in sub-Saharan Africa and that the financial inclusion index has positive effect on tax performance in sub-Saharan Africa. We also observed that there is a positive relationship between technology and tax performance in sub-Saharan Africa.\n \nResearch Practical & Social implications: Policies should be formulated to engender enhancement of technology and more investment should be allocated to technology as it is discovered to drive financial inclusion and promotes tax revenue mobilization. In general, the findings indicate that policies are needed to engender an enhancement of technology and more investment should be channeled to technology as it affects financial inclusion and by logical extension, the promotion of tax revenue mobilization.\n \nOriginality/value: The challenge of tax implementation can be directly ascribed to an ineffective tax system. A tax management that is of high in superiority, helps to make the tax mobilization process more transparent and efficient, and also reduce the level of shadow economy, which main feature is non- remittance or payment of tax. This study reveals that a tax administration system can only operate effectively with the use of modern information technologies.","PeriodicalId":31480,"journal":{"name":"International Journal of Professional Business Review","volume":"55 2","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-12-11","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"International Journal of Professional Business Review","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.26668/businessreview/2023.v8i12.2341","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"Decision Sciences","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Purpose: The main objective of this paper is to determine empirically the impact of financial inclusion and Information Communication Technology (ICT) on tax performance in Sub-Saharan African countries; determine the extent to which the elements of financial inclusion have influenced tax performance of countries in Sub-Saharan Africa; and examine the role technology plays in impacting the performance of taxes in Sub-Saharan African countries.
Theoretical Framework: The existing theories that serve as a roadmap for the development of this study are Theory of Digital Diffusion and Theory of Margins. Digital transformation has an important impact on the operations and systems of every economy, which often triggers a positive effect on taxes. Diffusion innovation theory was initiated by Rogers in 1962. The Theory of Margin on the other hand, is a theoretical school that gives validity to the impact of financial development on product output. It suggests that more access to financial services and products is vital for high output and economic advancement.
Design/Methodology/Approach: The population considered in this study was 48 sub-Saharan African Countries from the period of 1999 to 2019. The methods used for the analysis consists of the descriptive and correlation analysis on the identified variables and a creation of financial inclusion index using the Principal Component Analysis to deal with multiclonality challenge amongst the financial inclusion proxies, it also adopted the two-staged least square estimation technique for the empirical analysis.
Findings: The study reveals inter alia that the variables for financial inclusion and ICT proxies are overwhelmingly positive and significantly impact on the tax performance (i.e., total tax revenue and the non-resource tax revenue as percentages of GDP), in sub-Saharan Africa and that the financial inclusion index has positive effect on tax performance in sub-Saharan Africa. We also observed that there is a positive relationship between technology and tax performance in sub-Saharan Africa.
Research Practical & Social implications: Policies should be formulated to engender enhancement of technology and more investment should be allocated to technology as it is discovered to drive financial inclusion and promotes tax revenue mobilization. In general, the findings indicate that policies are needed to engender an enhancement of technology and more investment should be channeled to technology as it affects financial inclusion and by logical extension, the promotion of tax revenue mobilization.
Originality/value: The challenge of tax implementation can be directly ascribed to an ineffective tax system. A tax management that is of high in superiority, helps to make the tax mobilization process more transparent and efficient, and also reduce the level of shadow economy, which main feature is non- remittance or payment of tax. This study reveals that a tax administration system can only operate effectively with the use of modern information technologies.
目的:本文的主要目的是通过实证研究确定金融包容性和信息通信技术(ICT)对撒哈拉以南非洲国家税收绩效的影响;确定金融包容性要素对撒哈拉以南非洲国家税收绩效的影响程度;以及研究技术在影响撒哈拉以南非洲国家税收绩效方面发挥的作用。理论框架:作为本研究发展路线图的现有理论是数字扩散理论(Theory of Digital Diffusion)和边际理论(Theory of Margins)。数字化转型对每个经济体的运营和系统都有重要影响,往往会对税收产生积极影响。扩散创新理论由罗杰斯于 1962 年提出。另一方面,边际理论是一个理论流派,它赋予金融发展对产品产出的影响以合理性。该理论认为,获得更多的金融服务和产品对于高产出和经济发展至关重要。设计/方法/途径:本研究考虑的对象是 1999 年至 2019 年期间的 48 个撒哈拉以南非洲国家。分析方法包括对确定的变量进行描述性和相关性分析,并使用主成分分析法创建金融包容性指数,以应对金融包容性代用指标之间的多梯队性挑战,还采用了两阶段最小平方估计技术进行实证分析。研究结果:研究结果显示,金融包容性变量和信息通信技术替代变量对撒哈拉以南非洲的税收绩效(即税收总额和非资源税收入占国内生产总值的百分比)具有压倒性的积极和显著影响,金融包容性指数对撒哈拉以南非洲的税收绩效具有积极影响。我们还发现,在撒哈拉以南非洲,技术与税收绩效之间存在正相关关系。研究的实际意义和社会影响:应制定政策促进技术发展,并为技术分配更多投资,因为研究发现技术可推动金融包容性并促进税收动员。总体而言,研究结果表明,需要制定政策来促进技术发展,并为技术分配更多投资,因为技术会影响金融包容性,并顺理成章地促进税收动员。原创性/价值:税收执行方面的挑战可直接归因于税收制度的无效。 高水平的税收管理有助于提高税收动员过程的透明度和效率,也有助于降低影子经济的水平,影子经济的主要特征是不汇税或不缴税。这项研究表明,只有利用现代信息技术,税收管理系统才能有效运行。