Tax Administration and the Small Taxpayer
Parthasarathi Shome
No 2004/002, IMF Policy Discussion Papers from International Monetary Fund
Abstract:
Small taxpayers should pay their appropriate revenue share while their compliance costs should be reduced. This assumes importance as restructuring in emerging markets has meant rapid growth in services through self-employed small entrepreneurs, who have good revenue potential. Administrative facilitators such as a single tax covering income tax, VAT, and social security tax, at a reduced rate, do not lower tax evasion. They increase vertical and horizontal inequity, and lead to adverse resource allocation. A strategy is needed, extending modernization achieved in large taxpayer units (LTUs) to small taxpayers, including rationalization of collection and reporting of revenue data for policy formulation.
Keywords: PDP; small taxpayer; tax administration; tax evasion; tax structure; administration measure; GDP ratio; Tax policy; tax administration; small taxpayers; large taxpayer units; services sector; tax administration and the small taxpayer; taxpayer base; tax simplification; taxpayer group; tax statute; tax administrator; tax practice; revenue productivity; taxpayer size; taxpayer separation; tax calculation; Income tax systems; Value-added tax; Tax administration core functions; Small and medium enterprises; Social security contributions; Asia and Pacific; Australia and New Zealand; Eastern Europe; North America; Northern Europe (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 33
Date: 2004-05-01
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