The Distributional Impact of Fiscal Policy in South Africa

This paper uses the 2010/11 Income and Expenditure Survey for South Africa to analyze the progressivity of the main tax and social spending programs and quantify their impact on poverty and inequality. The paper also assesses the redistributive effectiveness of fiscal interventions given the resources used. Because it applies the Commitment to Equity methodology, the results for South Africa can be compared with other middle-income countries for which the framework has also been applied. The main results are twofold. First, the burden of taxes -- namely the personal income tax, the value added tax, excises on alcohol and tobacco, and the fuel levy -- falls on the richest in South Africa and social spending results in sizable increases in the incomes of the poor. In other words, for the components examined, the tax and social spending system is overall progressive. Second, for these elements, fiscal policy in South Africa achieves appreciable reductions in income inequality and poverty. Moreover, these reductions are the largest achieved in the emerging market countries that have so far been included in the Commitment to Equity project. Although fiscal policy is equalizing and poverty-reducing, the levels of inequality and poverty that remain still rank among the highest in middle-income countries. Looking ahead, as South Africa grapples with slow economic growth, a high fiscal deficit, and a rising debt burden, addressing the twin challenges of high inequality and poverty will require not only much improved quality of public services, but also higher and more inclusive economic growth.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Maboshe, Mashekwa, Inchauste, Gabriela, Purfield, Catriona, Lustig, Nora, Woolard, Ingrid
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank Group, Washington, DC 2015-02
Subjects:ACCOUNTING, APARTHEID, BASIC EDUCATION, BENCHMARK, BENCHMARKS, BENEFICIARIES, BENEFICIARY, BUDGET REVIEW, CAPITAL ASSETS, CAPITAL GAINS, CASH TRANSFER, CASH TRANSFERS, COMMODITIES, CONSUMERS, CONSUMPTION TAXES, CORPORATE INCOME TAX, CORPORATE TAXES, DEBT, DEBT BURDEN, DEDUCTIONS, DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, DEVELOPMENT POLICY, DISPOSABLE INCOME, DISTRIBUTION OF INCOME, DIVIDENDS, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ELECTRICITY, EMERGING MARKET, EMERGING MARKET COUNTRIES, EQUAL SHARE, EXCHANGE RATE, EXCISE TAX, EXCISE TAXES, EXPENDITURE, EXPENDITURES, FINANCIAL CRISIS, FINANCIAL SERVICES, FISCAL BALANCE, FISCAL DEFICIT, FISCAL MANAGEMENT, FISCAL POLICY, GDP, GINI COEFFICIENT, GOVERNMENT BUDGET, GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE, GOVERNMENT REVENUE, GOVERNMENT SPENDING, GOVERNMENT SUBSIDIES, HEALTH SPENDING, HORIZONTAL EQUITY, HOUSEHOLD INCOME, HOUSING, INCOME, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, INCOME DYNAMICS, INCOME GROUP, INCOME GROUPS, INCOME INEQUALITY, INCOME LEVEL, INCOME LEVELS, INCOME TAX, INCOME TAXES, INCOMES, INDIRECT SUBSIDIES, INDIRECT SUBSIDY, INDIRECT TAXATION, INELASTIC DEMAND, INFLATION, INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS, INSTRUMENT, INSURANCE, INTEREST INCOME, INTEREST PAYMENTS, INTERNATIONAL BANK, INTERNATIONAL TRADE, INVENTORIES, INVESTMENT INCOME, INVESTMENT SPENDING, LAND USE, LEVIES, LEVY, LORENZ CURVE, MACROECONOMICS, MICRO-DATA, MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES, MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRY, MONETARY FUND, MUNICIPAL SERVICES, MUNICIPALITIES, NATIONAL BUDGET, NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT, NATIONAL INCOME, NATIONAL TREASURY, NET DEBT, NONTAX REVENUE, OLD -AGE PENSION, OLD-AGE PENSION, OLD-AGE PENSIONS, OUTPUT, PAYROLL TAXES, PENSION, PENSION FUNDS, PENSION REFORM, PENSIONS, PER CAPITA INCOME, PERSONAL INCOME, PERSONAL INCOME TAX, PERSONAL INCOME TAXES, POWER PARITY, PRIVATE SECTOR, PROGRESSIVE TAX, PROPERTY TAXES, PUBLIC, PUBLIC GOODS, PUBLIC POLICY, PUBLIC SECTOR, PUBLIC SERVICE, PUBLIC SPENDING, PURCHASING POWER, REDISTRIBUTIVE EFFECTS, REGRESSIVE TAX, RESERVE, RESERVE BANK, RETURNS, REVENUE SOURCES, ROADS, SALES TAX, SOCIAL SAFETY NET, SOCIAL SECURITY TAXES, SWAP, TAX, TAX ADMINISTRATION, TAX BASE, TAX COLLECTIONS, TAX EVASION, TAX INCIDENCE, TAX POLICY, TAX RATE, TAX REBATES, TAX RETURNS, TAX REVENUE, TAX SHIFTING, TAX SYSTEM, TAXABLE INCOME, TAXATION, TAXPAYERS, TIME CONSTRAINTS, TOTAL REVENUE, TRADE TAXES, TREASURY, UNDERESTIMATES, UNEMPLOYMENT, URBAN SERVICES, VALUE ADDED, VALUE ADDED TAX, WAGES,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/02/23984236/distributional-impact-fiscal-policy-south-africa
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/21447
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!