Territorial inequality, equalization transfers and asymmetric sharing of non-renewable natural resources in Latin America

Non-renewable natural resources (NRNR) contribute a large share of tax revenue in Latin American countries; and the fact that these resources are concentrated in just a few regions generates a high level of territorial inequality. This paper aims to analyse how NRNR revenues could be included in equalization grants, and how countries are implementing adequate equalization grant systems, or could do so. Based on fiscal equalization theory, vertical and horizontal systems are evaluated with reference to mid-level governments in Argentina and Peru. The study identifies a variety of political and economic costs for different NRNR revenue systems, where: (i) the provinces own the resources in question (Argentina); and (ii) NRNR revenues are collected and distributed by central government to a large number of subnational governments under a fully asymmetrical scheme (Peru).

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Brosio, Giorgio, Jiménez, Juan Pablo, Ruelas, Ignacio
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 2018-12-17
Subjects:RECURSOS RENOVABLES, INGRESOS FISCALES, GOBIERNO LOCAL, INGRESOS, DESIGUALDADES REGIONALES, POLITICA FISCAL, RENEWABLE RESOURCES, TAX REVENUES, LOCAL GOVERNMENT, INCOME, REGIONAL DISPARITIES, FISCAL POLICY,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11362/44558
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spelling dig-cepal-11362-445582023-01-30T18:19:36Z Territorial inequality, equalization transfers and asymmetric sharing of non-renewable natural resources in Latin America Brosio, Giorgio Jiménez, Juan Pablo Ruelas, Ignacio RECURSOS RENOVABLES INGRESOS FISCALES GOBIERNO LOCAL INGRESOS DESIGUALDADES REGIONALES POLITICA FISCAL RENEWABLE RESOURCES TAX REVENUES LOCAL GOVERNMENT INCOME REGIONAL DISPARITIES FISCAL POLICY Non-renewable natural resources (NRNR) contribute a large share of tax revenue in Latin American countries; and the fact that these resources are concentrated in just a few regions generates a high level of territorial inequality. This paper aims to analyse how NRNR revenues could be included in equalization grants, and how countries are implementing adequate equalization grant systems, or could do so. Based on fiscal equalization theory, vertical and horizontal systems are evaluated with reference to mid-level governments in Argentina and Peru. The study identifies a variety of political and economic costs for different NRNR revenue systems, where: (i) the provinces own the resources in question (Argentina); and (ii) NRNR revenues are collected and distributed by central government to a large number of subnational governments under a fully asymmetrical scheme (Peru). 2019-04-08T21:45:01Z 2019-04-08T21:45:01Z 2018-12-17 Texto Sección o Parte de un Documento https://hdl.handle.net/11362/44558 LC/PUB.2018/26-P 4 en CEPAL Review CEPAL Review 126 .pdf application/pdf AMERICA LATINA ARGENTINA PERU ARGENTINA LATIN AMERICA PERU
institution CEPAL
collection DSpace
country Chile
countrycode CL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cepal
tag biblioteca
region America del Sur
libraryname Biblioteca Hernán Santa Cruz
language English
topic RECURSOS RENOVABLES
INGRESOS FISCALES
GOBIERNO LOCAL
INGRESOS
DESIGUALDADES REGIONALES
POLITICA FISCAL
RENEWABLE RESOURCES
TAX REVENUES
LOCAL GOVERNMENT
INCOME
REGIONAL DISPARITIES
FISCAL POLICY
RECURSOS RENOVABLES
INGRESOS FISCALES
GOBIERNO LOCAL
INGRESOS
DESIGUALDADES REGIONALES
POLITICA FISCAL
RENEWABLE RESOURCES
TAX REVENUES
LOCAL GOVERNMENT
INCOME
REGIONAL DISPARITIES
FISCAL POLICY
spellingShingle RECURSOS RENOVABLES
INGRESOS FISCALES
GOBIERNO LOCAL
INGRESOS
DESIGUALDADES REGIONALES
POLITICA FISCAL
RENEWABLE RESOURCES
TAX REVENUES
LOCAL GOVERNMENT
INCOME
REGIONAL DISPARITIES
FISCAL POLICY
RECURSOS RENOVABLES
INGRESOS FISCALES
GOBIERNO LOCAL
INGRESOS
DESIGUALDADES REGIONALES
POLITICA FISCAL
RENEWABLE RESOURCES
TAX REVENUES
LOCAL GOVERNMENT
INCOME
REGIONAL DISPARITIES
FISCAL POLICY
Brosio, Giorgio
Jiménez, Juan Pablo
Ruelas, Ignacio
Territorial inequality, equalization transfers and asymmetric sharing of non-renewable natural resources in Latin America
description Non-renewable natural resources (NRNR) contribute a large share of tax revenue in Latin American countries; and the fact that these resources are concentrated in just a few regions generates a high level of territorial inequality. This paper aims to analyse how NRNR revenues could be included in equalization grants, and how countries are implementing adequate equalization grant systems, or could do so. Based on fiscal equalization theory, vertical and horizontal systems are evaluated with reference to mid-level governments in Argentina and Peru. The study identifies a variety of political and economic costs for different NRNR revenue systems, where: (i) the provinces own the resources in question (Argentina); and (ii) NRNR revenues are collected and distributed by central government to a large number of subnational governments under a fully asymmetrical scheme (Peru).
format Texto
topic_facet RECURSOS RENOVABLES
INGRESOS FISCALES
GOBIERNO LOCAL
INGRESOS
DESIGUALDADES REGIONALES
POLITICA FISCAL
RENEWABLE RESOURCES
TAX REVENUES
LOCAL GOVERNMENT
INCOME
REGIONAL DISPARITIES
FISCAL POLICY
author Brosio, Giorgio
Jiménez, Juan Pablo
Ruelas, Ignacio
author_facet Brosio, Giorgio
Jiménez, Juan Pablo
Ruelas, Ignacio
author_sort Brosio, Giorgio
title Territorial inequality, equalization transfers and asymmetric sharing of non-renewable natural resources in Latin America
title_short Territorial inequality, equalization transfers and asymmetric sharing of non-renewable natural resources in Latin America
title_full Territorial inequality, equalization transfers and asymmetric sharing of non-renewable natural resources in Latin America
title_fullStr Territorial inequality, equalization transfers and asymmetric sharing of non-renewable natural resources in Latin America
title_full_unstemmed Territorial inequality, equalization transfers and asymmetric sharing of non-renewable natural resources in Latin America
title_sort territorial inequality, equalization transfers and asymmetric sharing of non-renewable natural resources in latin america
publishDate 2018-12-17
url https://hdl.handle.net/11362/44558
work_keys_str_mv AT brosiogiorgio territorialinequalityequalizationtransfersandasymmetricsharingofnonrenewablenaturalresourcesinlatinamerica
AT jimenezjuanpablo territorialinequalityequalizationtransfersandasymmetricsharingofnonrenewablenaturalresourcesinlatinamerica
AT ruelasignacio territorialinequalityequalizationtransfersandasymmetricsharingofnonrenewablenaturalresourcesinlatinamerica
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