Abstract

Buoyancy refers to how tax revenue responds to a gross domestic product without correcting for discretionary alterations in the tax system. The paper assessed the buoyancy of Namibia’s overall tax system in an attempt to measure the response of the tax system in entirety because of fluctuations in the national income and/or the deliberate act by the government to increase tax rate, reviewed tax code and tax machinery etc. The study employed the Engle-Granger approach to the error correction model to estimate the tax buoyancy for the period 2001 to 2014. The empirical findings from the study revealed that overall the Namibian tax system is income inelastic and not buoyant. This is confirmed by a low and negative value of 0.036 which is less than unit. Thus, the economy is not generating sufficient revenue both through discretionary tax measure and through the expansion in the economic activities. Therefore, the government need to introduce measures that will allow for more tax revenue collection to have a stable revenue base. This also means the government need to keep track of tax mobilization with growth in the gross domestic product as well as to ascertain taxes that are productive.

Highlights

  • Taxation generates most income for government in Namibia with the contribution of 65% towards the total revenue (Bank of Namibia [BoN], 2015)

  • The results from this study indicated that elasticity coefficient of the tax revenue both with respect to total Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and non-agricultural GDP is less than a unit

  • In employing the vector error correction model (VECM), the results revealed that the tax system was income inelastic but buoyant

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Taxation generates most income for government in Namibia with the contribution of 65% towards the total revenue (Bank of Namibia [BoN], 2015). Like other developing countries Namibian government is faced with challenges of mobilising enough resources to finance capital projects, poverty alleviation and to attain the targets stated by government in the national development plans. The Namibian tax system is regulated by the Income Tax Act and Value Added Tax Act 10 of 2000. Employee tax is another tax head collected by the employer from the employee and remitted to the Receiver of Revenue.

Methods
Findings
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call