Does Fiscal Policy Benefit the Poor and Reduce Inequality in Namibia?

Reducing poverty and inequality continues to be an important national priority in Namibia. Vision 2030 – the country’s guiding development strategy – has a subordinate vision that points to several goals: “Poverty is reduced to the minimum, the existing pattern of income-distribution is equitable and disparity is at the minimum.” Vision 2030 is being implemented via a series of five-year National Development Plans, with the current National Development Plan IV (NDP4) covering 2012 through to 2017. NDP4 sets specific numerical targets. One is reducing the incidence of extreme poverty to less than 10 percent of individuals by the end of FY2016/17, measured at the national lower bound poverty line of N$277.54 in 2009/10. This report demonstrates that Namibia’s progressive income tax and generous social spending programs substantially reduce poverty and inequality, but the analysis also underscores the limits of what redistributive fiscal measures alone can accomplish. The economy must ultimately create more jobs for the poorest members of society to change the underlying distribution of what might be called “pre-fiscal” income; i.e., the income before households pay taxes and receive benefits from social programs. This will require structural transformation through greater investment in activities that create employment for unskilled workers and offer the potential for continuous productivity increases. This report aims to measure the effectiveness of these efforts and draws comparisons to the experiences of other countries. It estimates how major taxes and social spending programs affect individual incomes. It then assesses who benefits from or bears the burden of each instrument and by how much. This way, the analysis estimates the contribution of each instrument to reducing the poverty headcount and the Gini coefficient, a standard measure of inequality. The analysis provides evidence that can shape public debates over government spending and the design of social programs.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Namibia Statistics Agency, World Bank
Format: Report biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2017-06
Subjects:FISCAL POLICY, INEQUALITY, POVERTY REDUCTION, TAXATION,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/991551497258273367/Does-fiscal-policy-benefit-the-poor-and-reduce-inequality-in-Namibia
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/27538
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spelling dig-okr-10986275382024-08-07T19:39:22Z Does Fiscal Policy Benefit the Poor and Reduce Inequality in Namibia? Namibia Statistics Agency World Bank FISCAL POLICY INEQUALITY POVERTY REDUCTION TAXATION Reducing poverty and inequality continues to be an important national priority in Namibia. Vision 2030 – the country’s guiding development strategy – has a subordinate vision that points to several goals: “Poverty is reduced to the minimum, the existing pattern of income-distribution is equitable and disparity is at the minimum.” Vision 2030 is being implemented via a series of five-year National Development Plans, with the current National Development Plan IV (NDP4) covering 2012 through to 2017. NDP4 sets specific numerical targets. One is reducing the incidence of extreme poverty to less than 10 percent of individuals by the end of FY2016/17, measured at the national lower bound poverty line of N$277.54 in 2009/10. This report demonstrates that Namibia’s progressive income tax and generous social spending programs substantially reduce poverty and inequality, but the analysis also underscores the limits of what redistributive fiscal measures alone can accomplish. The economy must ultimately create more jobs for the poorest members of society to change the underlying distribution of what might be called “pre-fiscal” income; i.e., the income before households pay taxes and receive benefits from social programs. This will require structural transformation through greater investment in activities that create employment for unskilled workers and offer the potential for continuous productivity increases. This report aims to measure the effectiveness of these efforts and draws comparisons to the experiences of other countries. It estimates how major taxes and social spending programs affect individual incomes. It then assesses who benefits from or bears the burden of each instrument and by how much. This way, the analysis estimates the contribution of each instrument to reducing the poverty headcount and the Gini coefficient, a standard measure of inequality. The analysis provides evidence that can shape public debates over government spending and the design of social programs. 2017-07-06T21:55:24Z 2017-07-06T21:55:24Z 2017-06 Report Rapport Informe http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/991551497258273367/Does-fiscal-policy-benefit-the-poor-and-reduce-inequality-in-Namibia https://hdl.handle.net/10986/27538 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf World Bank, Washington, DC
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
en_US
topic FISCAL POLICY
INEQUALITY
POVERTY REDUCTION
TAXATION
FISCAL POLICY
INEQUALITY
POVERTY REDUCTION
TAXATION
spellingShingle FISCAL POLICY
INEQUALITY
POVERTY REDUCTION
TAXATION
FISCAL POLICY
INEQUALITY
POVERTY REDUCTION
TAXATION
Namibia Statistics Agency
World Bank
Does Fiscal Policy Benefit the Poor and Reduce Inequality in Namibia?
description Reducing poverty and inequality continues to be an important national priority in Namibia. Vision 2030 – the country’s guiding development strategy – has a subordinate vision that points to several goals: “Poverty is reduced to the minimum, the existing pattern of income-distribution is equitable and disparity is at the minimum.” Vision 2030 is being implemented via a series of five-year National Development Plans, with the current National Development Plan IV (NDP4) covering 2012 through to 2017. NDP4 sets specific numerical targets. One is reducing the incidence of extreme poverty to less than 10 percent of individuals by the end of FY2016/17, measured at the national lower bound poverty line of N$277.54 in 2009/10. This report demonstrates that Namibia’s progressive income tax and generous social spending programs substantially reduce poverty and inequality, but the analysis also underscores the limits of what redistributive fiscal measures alone can accomplish. The economy must ultimately create more jobs for the poorest members of society to change the underlying distribution of what might be called “pre-fiscal” income; i.e., the income before households pay taxes and receive benefits from social programs. This will require structural transformation through greater investment in activities that create employment for unskilled workers and offer the potential for continuous productivity increases. This report aims to measure the effectiveness of these efforts and draws comparisons to the experiences of other countries. It estimates how major taxes and social spending programs affect individual incomes. It then assesses who benefits from or bears the burden of each instrument and by how much. This way, the analysis estimates the contribution of each instrument to reducing the poverty headcount and the Gini coefficient, a standard measure of inequality. The analysis provides evidence that can shape public debates over government spending and the design of social programs.
format Report
topic_facet FISCAL POLICY
INEQUALITY
POVERTY REDUCTION
TAXATION
author Namibia Statistics Agency
World Bank
author_facet Namibia Statistics Agency
World Bank
author_sort Namibia Statistics Agency
title Does Fiscal Policy Benefit the Poor and Reduce Inequality in Namibia?
title_short Does Fiscal Policy Benefit the Poor and Reduce Inequality in Namibia?
title_full Does Fiscal Policy Benefit the Poor and Reduce Inequality in Namibia?
title_fullStr Does Fiscal Policy Benefit the Poor and Reduce Inequality in Namibia?
title_full_unstemmed Does Fiscal Policy Benefit the Poor and Reduce Inequality in Namibia?
title_sort does fiscal policy benefit the poor and reduce inequality in namibia?
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2017-06
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/991551497258273367/Does-fiscal-policy-benefit-the-poor-and-reduce-inequality-in-Namibia
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/27538
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