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Tax expenditures and progress to the Sustainable Development Goals

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Version 2 2024-06-19, 11:41
Version 1 2024-04-12, 09:45
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-19, 11:41 authored by Michael Masiya, Stephen Hall, Stuart Murray, Rachel Etta-Phoya, Eilish Hannah, Bernadette O'Hare

This study reports the impact of governments having additional revenue equivalent to tax expenditures on achieving the Sustainable Development Goals in 97 countries. The study draws data on revenue foregone from the Global Tax Expenditure Database. To analyze the potential of an increase in government revenue equivalent to the revenue foregone, the study uses the Government Revenue and Development Estimations modeling. The study finds that if governments had additional revenue equivalent to tax expenditures: an additional 17 million children would attend school (13.62% currently out of school), an additional 70 million people would use basic water (23% of those without access), 146 million would use basic sanitation (20% of those without access), 181,000 children would survive (13% of children who currently die), and 12,000 mothers would survive (16% of mothers who currently die). Critically, there would be improvements in governance indicators in all regions. Foregone revenue from tax expenditures could increase access to public services for millions, which is the most effective tool for reducing inequality and driving progress toward sustainable development. The massive opportunity costs reported here require all governments to report and justify their annual tax expenditure.

Funding

Action Aid International, the Professor Sonia Buist Global Child Health Research Fund, the MRC Impact Acceleration Account, and the Impact and Innovation Fund at the University of St Andrews.

History

Author affiliation

College of Social Sci Arts and Humanities/School of Business

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Sustainable Development

Publisher

Wiley

issn

0968-0802

eissn

1099-1719

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2024-06-19

Language

en

Deposited by

Professor Stephen Hall

Deposit date

2024-04-10

Data Access Statement

The data utilized in this study are publicly accessible. Taxexpenditure data can be retrieved from the Global Tax Expenditure Database (GTED) and revenue and development estimations are available from the Government Revenue and Development Estimations (GRADE)website of the University of St. Andrews. Specific queries can be directed to the corresponding author

Rights Retention Statement

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