Taxation, coercion and donors. Local government tax enforcement in Tanzania
Journal article, Peer reviewed
Date
2001-01-01Metadata
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Original version
in The Journal of Modern African Studies vol. 39 no. 2 pp. 289-306 10.1017/S0022278X01003627Abstract
This paper presents three propositions about tax collection by local authorities in Tanzania. First, revenue performance depends on the degree of coercion involved in tax enforcement. Reciprocity does not seem to be an inherent component of the state-society relationship in connection with local government taxation. Second, the extent of coercion depends on the bargaining powers of the stakeholders involved in the tax enforcement process. In particular, coercive tax enforcement is facilitated when the 'bargaining powers' with respect to tax collection favour the council administration, and the elected councillors have no direct influence on collection. Third, the presence of donors in a local authority may be crucial by changing the 'balance of power' in favour of the council administration, with implications for accountability, responsiveness and democratic development. These results may explain why widespread differences in revenue performance between local authorities are observed.
Series
The Journal of Modern African Studies vol. 39 no. 2The Journal of Modern African Studies vol. 39 no. 2