Institutional Quality and Government Efficiency

Peer Reviewed icon Peer Reviewed
Date issued
April 2007
Subject
Public Utility;
Fiscal Policy
JEL code
H20 - Taxation, Subsidies, and Revenue: General;
H41 - Public Goods;
O10 - Economic Development: General;
O17 - Formal and Informal Sectors • Shadow Economy • Institutional Arrangements
Category
Working Papers
Poorer countries have a much smaller public sector and correspondingly a smaller tax burden than richer countries, yet, their economic performance has not been necessarily better. Using a simple model, this paper suggests that the growth and welfare effects of taxation are mediated through institutional quality; consequently, optimal tax levels increase with improved institutional quality. The paper then employs firm-level perceptions on the quality of public services and on the tax burden to test some of the model¿s predictions. Consistent with these predictions, the paper finds that a higher level of institutional quality bolsters positive perceptions of the quality of public services while at the same time moderating the view of taxes as an obstacle to growth.
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