Remittances and Revenue in Latin America, 1990-2017.

International Migration Redistribution Remittances Taxation

Journal

Studies in comparative international development
ISSN: 0039-3606
Titre abrégé: Stud Comp Int Dev
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 9878854

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
23 Mar 2023
Historique:
accepted: 20 01 2023
pubmed: 26 6 2023
medline: 26 6 2023
entrez: 26 6 2023
Statut: aheadofprint

Résumé

Do international remittances increase government tax income in developing economies? This study investigates remittances' relationship to revenue within Latin American countries. The author builds on recent micro-level research by conceptualizing households with remittances as a transnational dispersed interest group in the political economy of taxation. Remittances increase recipients' wealth and decouple their well-being from domestic economic processes. Together, these effects suggest that remittances generate tax preferences that align more closely with promarket tax policies offered by the political right while decreasing the value of social protection expenditures. The author hypothesizes that these effects lead remittances to boost tax revenue when the right governs, but not the left. However, shifts to the left limit remittances' effect on revenue by decreasing income from direct taxes on wealth. Results from time-series error correction models, an event-study analysis, and twostage least squares models support these expectations. The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s12116-023-09390-3.

Identifiants

pubmed: 37360792
doi: 10.1007/s12116-023-09390-3
pii: 9390
pmc: PMC10034909
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

1-26

Informations de copyright

© The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature 2023, Springer Nature or its licensor (e.g. a society or other partner) holds exclusive rights to this article under a publishing agreement with the author(s) or other rightsholder(s); author self-archiving of the accepted manuscript version of this article is solely governed by the terms of such publishing agreement and applicable law.

Auteurs

Michael D Tyburski (MD)

Department of Political Science, Kansas State University, 802 Mid Campus Dr. South, 101D Calvin Hall, Manhattan, KS 66506 USA.

Classifications MeSH