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A quantitative theory of tax evasion
Institution:1. Université des Antilles et de la Guyane, Laboratoire CEREGMIA. Universit é des Antilles et de La Guyane, Campus Schoelcher, B.P. 7209, 97275 Schoelcher Cédex (FWI), France;2. Aix-Marseille Université (Aix-Marseille School of Economics) & CNRS & EHESS, Banque de France, CEPII, Château Lafarge, route des Milles, 13290 Aix-en-Provence Les Milles, France;3. Université des Antilles et de la Guyane, Laboratoire CEREGMIA. Universit é des Antilles et de La Guyane, Campus Fouillole, 97159 Pointe-à-Pitre Guadeloupe (FWI), France;4. Morgan State University, Baltimore, MD, USA
Abstract:I present a simple, unified approach to study the tax evasion practices often observed in developing countries. I develop a general equilibrium model where heterogeneous establishments optimally select themselves into informality, tax compliance, and formal tax evasion. Informal firms evade taxes by staying small, while larger, formal firms can engage in costly tax evasion. In equilibrium, tax revenues rely on medium-sized firms, which are scarce. In a calibration exercise using data from Mexico, I find that reducing the returns to tax evasion by formal firms increases tax revenues by up to 68%. However, economies where such returns are too high face a trade-off between tax collection and aggregate efficiency, as cracking down on formal tax-evading firms pushes some firms into informality. Last, as the economy develops, the informal sector shrinks, while the tax-evading sector expands, thus limiting potential collection. If lower informality is a byproduct of development, and not vice versa, a solid tax base can be achieved by fiscal authorities effectively by focusing on formal tax evasion.
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