Do Illicit Financial Flows Hurt Tax Revenues? Evidence from the Developing World

Recent work draws attention to the fragility of domestic tax revenues—a vital resource for the developing world—to illicit financial flows. To cope with two major challenges in the illicit financial flows–tax revenues relationship—related to the mere illicit financial flows measurement and reverse causality—this paper exploits the Financial Action Task Force data using an impact assessment analysis. Estimations reveal a significant tax revenue loss in countries associated with important illicit financial flows with respect to comparable countries without important illicit financial flows. Moreover, this causal effect—estimated as being economically meaningful—is supported by a large robustness section, and in particular remains unchanged when using several “doubly robust” estimators. Lastly, it unveils heterogeneities in the impact of illicit financial flows on tax revenues, related to the type of tax—a significant loss for indirect but not for direct taxes—and the considered environment. Therefore, policies combating illicit financial flows—for example, by developing institutions or a sound financial system, as shown by the estimations—may provide additional tax revenues for the developing world.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Combes, Jean-Louis, Minea, Alexandru, Sawadogo, Pegdewende Nestor
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2021-09
Subjects:TAX REVENUE, ILLICIT FINANCIAL FLOWS, FINANCIAL ACTION TASK FORCE, EVENT ANALYSIS,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/920391632411569911/Do-Illicit-Financial-Flows-Hurt-Tax-Revenues-Evidence-from-the-Developing-World
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36308
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spelling dig-okr-10986363082021-09-28T05:10:41Z Do Illicit Financial Flows Hurt Tax Revenues? Evidence from the Developing World Combes, Jean-Louis Minea, Alexandru Sawadogo, Pegdewende Nestor TAX REVENUE ILLICIT FINANCIAL FLOWS FINANCIAL ACTION TASK FORCE EVENT ANALYSIS Recent work draws attention to the fragility of domestic tax revenues—a vital resource for the developing world—to illicit financial flows. To cope with two major challenges in the illicit financial flows–tax revenues relationship—related to the mere illicit financial flows measurement and reverse causality—this paper exploits the Financial Action Task Force data using an impact assessment analysis. Estimations reveal a significant tax revenue loss in countries associated with important illicit financial flows with respect to comparable countries without important illicit financial flows. Moreover, this causal effect—estimated as being economically meaningful—is supported by a large robustness section, and in particular remains unchanged when using several “doubly robust” estimators. Lastly, it unveils heterogeneities in the impact of illicit financial flows on tax revenues, related to the type of tax—a significant loss for indirect but not for direct taxes—and the considered environment. Therefore, policies combating illicit financial flows—for example, by developing institutions or a sound financial system, as shown by the estimations—may provide additional tax revenues for the developing world. 2021-09-27T21:29:03Z 2021-09-27T21:29:03Z 2021-09 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/920391632411569911/Do-Illicit-Financial-Flows-Hurt-Tax-Revenues-Evidence-from-the-Developing-World http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36308 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic TAX REVENUE
ILLICIT FINANCIAL FLOWS
FINANCIAL ACTION TASK FORCE
EVENT ANALYSIS
TAX REVENUE
ILLICIT FINANCIAL FLOWS
FINANCIAL ACTION TASK FORCE
EVENT ANALYSIS
spellingShingle TAX REVENUE
ILLICIT FINANCIAL FLOWS
FINANCIAL ACTION TASK FORCE
EVENT ANALYSIS
TAX REVENUE
ILLICIT FINANCIAL FLOWS
FINANCIAL ACTION TASK FORCE
EVENT ANALYSIS
Combes, Jean-Louis
Minea, Alexandru
Sawadogo, Pegdewende Nestor
Do Illicit Financial Flows Hurt Tax Revenues? Evidence from the Developing World
description Recent work draws attention to the fragility of domestic tax revenues—a vital resource for the developing world—to illicit financial flows. To cope with two major challenges in the illicit financial flows–tax revenues relationship—related to the mere illicit financial flows measurement and reverse causality—this paper exploits the Financial Action Task Force data using an impact assessment analysis. Estimations reveal a significant tax revenue loss in countries associated with important illicit financial flows with respect to comparable countries without important illicit financial flows. Moreover, this causal effect—estimated as being economically meaningful—is supported by a large robustness section, and in particular remains unchanged when using several “doubly robust” estimators. Lastly, it unveils heterogeneities in the impact of illicit financial flows on tax revenues, related to the type of tax—a significant loss for indirect but not for direct taxes—and the considered environment. Therefore, policies combating illicit financial flows—for example, by developing institutions or a sound financial system, as shown by the estimations—may provide additional tax revenues for the developing world.
format Working Paper
topic_facet TAX REVENUE
ILLICIT FINANCIAL FLOWS
FINANCIAL ACTION TASK FORCE
EVENT ANALYSIS
author Combes, Jean-Louis
Minea, Alexandru
Sawadogo, Pegdewende Nestor
author_facet Combes, Jean-Louis
Minea, Alexandru
Sawadogo, Pegdewende Nestor
author_sort Combes, Jean-Louis
title Do Illicit Financial Flows Hurt Tax Revenues? Evidence from the Developing World
title_short Do Illicit Financial Flows Hurt Tax Revenues? Evidence from the Developing World
title_full Do Illicit Financial Flows Hurt Tax Revenues? Evidence from the Developing World
title_fullStr Do Illicit Financial Flows Hurt Tax Revenues? Evidence from the Developing World
title_full_unstemmed Do Illicit Financial Flows Hurt Tax Revenues? Evidence from the Developing World
title_sort do illicit financial flows hurt tax revenues? evidence from the developing world
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2021-09
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/920391632411569911/Do-Illicit-Financial-Flows-Hurt-Tax-Revenues-Evidence-from-the-Developing-World
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36308
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