United Nations University
World Institute for Development Economic
Research:
RP2006/17
Robert J. McIntyre:
Credit
Co-operatives in Locally Financed Economic Development: Using Energy
Efficiency
as a Lever
(PDF 131KB)
In most transitional and many developing countries institutions capable
of supporting
economic development with localized saving-investment cycles have not
developed.
This crucial gap is in no way addressed by either country-level macro
programmes
dealing with ‘development finance’ or by donor-driven ‘micro credit’
schemes of
Grameen and other types operating at a lower (local) level. The latter
seldom evolve
into financial institutions able to sustain themselves on the basis of
local resources, do
not operate on a sufficient scale to trigger dynamic local-level
economic growth, and are
ultimately artificial manifestations of concessional or charitable aid.
The advantages of
credit co-operatives in mobilizing and financing local economic
development are …
RP2006/16
Richard M. Auty:
Patterns
of Rent-Extraction and Deployment in Developing Countries: Implications
for
Governance, Economic Policy and Performance
(PDF
181KB)
Rents tend to be relatively high in developing countries and also very
fungible, so that
differences in the scale of the rent and in its distribution among
economic agents
profoundly affect the nature of the political state and the development
trajectory. This
paper identifies two basic trajectories to a high-income democracy
linked to the scale
and deployment of rents. Low-rent countries tend to engender
developmental political
states that competitively diversify the economy and sustain rapid per
capita GDP
(PCGDP) growth, which strengthens three key sanctions against
anti-social governance
(political accountability, social capital and the rule of law) to
achieve endogenous
democratization that is incremental. In contrast, rent-rich countries
are likely to
experience a slower and more erratic transition. This is because high
rents tend to …
RP2006/03
Ayodele Odusola:
Tax
Policy Reforms in Nigeria
(PDF 234KB)
Nigeria is governed by a federal system, hence its fiscal operations
also adhere to the
same principle, a fact which has serious implications on how the tax
system is managed.
The country’s tax system is lopsided, and dominated by oil revenue. It
is also
characterized by unnecessarily complex, distortionary and largely
inequitable taxation
laws that have limited application in the informal sector that
dominates the economy.
The primary objective of this paper is to prepare a case study on tax
policy reforms in
Nigeria, with the specific objectives of examining the main tax reforms
in the country;
highlighting tax revenue profile and composition; analysing possible
distributional
impacts on the poor; discussing major problems that could prevent
effective tax
implementation in the country; and offering suggestions for reforms.
RP2006/02
Samuel Fambon:
Taxation
in Developing Countries: Case Study of Cameroon
(PDF 118KB)
In the beginning of the 1980s, Cameroon witnessed a sustained rate of
growth, associated essentially
with the boom in the oil sector. Increased budgetary and
extra-budgetary resources generated by this
sector helped to raise the investment rate in the economy, and to
maintain a reasonable level of
external indebtedness. But after this period of expansion, the country
experienced unfavourable
economic development caused by a successive decline in the terms of
trade, leading to profound
imbalances, notably in public finance and the external account. The
government subsequently
initiated a series of measures to reform its tax system and to adapt it
to national economic realities.
An efficient and equitable taxation encourages production and the
accumulation of national wealth
stimulates saving and investments and hence job creation. Such a tax
system could, therefore, ensure
sustainable growth and development in Cameroon.
The study aims to contribute to a better understanding of the evolution
of the tax system in
Cameroon. In particular, the paper reviews the chronology of the main
tax reforms and the evidence
on the distributional aspect of taxation. Investigating the issues
involved with tax administration and
decentralization in the country and local government finances, it also
attempts to explore the
problems and successes associated with the implementation of tax
reforms.
RP2006/01
P.B. Anand:
Millennium
Development Goal 7: An Assessment of Progress With Respect to Water and
Sanitation: Legacy, Synergy, Complacency or Policy?
(PDF
256KB)
Access to water and sanitation (target 10) is an important ingredient
of quality of life.
As per WHO-UNICEF assessments, globally, 77 per cent of population had
access to
water in 1990. This proportion has increased to 83 per cent in 2002,
thus, on track to
achieve the target of halving the proportion of population without safe
access by 2015.
However, there is considerable regional disparity in progress which
remains
significantly low in many countries in sub-Saharan Africa. Also, the
question remains
whether increased access is same as sustainable access. In 2002, some
2.6 billion people
worldwide did not have access to safe sanitation options. Of these,
nearly 2 billion were
in the rural areas. While in almost all countries, the proportion of
people having
access to improved sanitation in 2002 has increased compared to the
status in 1990, in
27 countries including India, Nepal, Lao PDR, Namibia, Ethiopia,
Eritrea, and Yemen,
two out of three people did not have access to improved sanitation in
2002.
…/
RP2005/70
Marco Mazzoli:
Financial
Markets and R&D Investments: A Discrete-Time Model to Interpret
Public
Policies
(PDF 170KB
This paper introduces a discrete-time intertemporal investment model in
which the flow
of profits affects the risk premium on the cost of finance, and, as a
consequence, the rate
of discount of future profits. While public investments, according to a
consolidated
literature, constitute the main bulk of innovation policies, this model
is used to comment
and interpret the potential use of another, secondary, public policy,
consisting of tax
incentives for firms performing R&D expenditures and issuing
securities in the stock
market. Linking public policies for innovation to the stock market
might help to reduce
the problems of discretionality and the monitoring of public
expenditure used to finance
R&D and technical innovation.
RP2005/68
Subal C. Kumbhakar and George Mavrotas:
Financial
Sector Development and Productivity Growth (PDF
427KB)
Recent years have witnessed important
structural changes around the world as a result
of the globalization process, the creation of new economic blocks and
the liberalization
of financial sector in many countries. Responding to these changes many
sectors of the
industrialized countries have gone through major deregulatory changes
to acclimate
themselves to new environments. At the same time, many countries have
undertaken
institutional reforms to build a market-orientated financial system in
the hope that
transition towards market economy will improve productivity. In the
face of uncertainty
resulting from changes in regulatory structure and the development of
financial
institutions to foster market economy, many countries may not be able
to achieve their
maximum growth potential. In other words, productivity growth is likely
to depend on
the development of financial institutions and the stage of economic
development. …/…
RP2005/67
Stephen Njuguna Karingi and Bernadette Wanjala:
The
Tax Reform Experience of Kenya (PDF 145KB)
RP2005/66
Robert Darko Osei and Peter Quartey:
Tax
Reforms in Ghana (PDF112KB)
RP2005/65
Alemayehu Geda and Abebe Shimeles:
Taxes
and Tax Reform in Ethiopia, 1990-2003 (PDF
165KB)
RP2005/39
Anthony Enisan Akinlo:
Impact of Macroeconomic Factors on Total
Factor Productivity in Sub-Saharan
African Countries (PDF 202KB)
RP2004/27
Carlos A. Ibarra: Capital
Flows, Exchange Rate Regime, and Macroeconomic Performance in Mexico
(PDF 245KB)
RP2004/22
David Fielding, Kevin Lee and Kalvinder Shields:
Modelling
Macroeconomic Linkages in a Monetary Union: A West African Example
(PDF
414KB)
RP2004/21
David Fielding, Kevin Lee and Kalvinder Shields:
The
Characteristics of Macroeconomic Shocks in the CFA Franc Zone
(PDF
1047KB)
RP2004/20
Anja Shortland and David Stasavage:
Monetary
Policy in the Franc Zone: Estimating Interest Rate Rulesfor the BCEAO
(PDF 240KB)
DP2005/01
Elinor Ostrom:
Unlocking Public Entrepreneurship and Public
Economies (PDF 67KB)
**
DP2003/87
Robin Boadway:
National Taxation, Fiscal Federalism and
Global Taxation (PDF 245KB)
DP2003/86
Agnar Sandmo:
Environmental Taxation and Revenue for
Development (PDF 235KB)
DP2003/83
Ilene Grabel:
The Revenue and Double Dividend Potential of
Taxes on International Private Capital Flows and Securities Transactions
(PDF 225KB)
DP2003/81
Machiko Nissanke:
Revenue Potential of the
Currency Transaction Tax for Development Finance: A Critical Appraisal
(PDF 311KB)
The paper assesses the potential of
currency transaction taxes (CTT, widely known as
the Tobin tax), to raise revenue for global development. Though Tobin
proposed and
others assessed CTTs in terms of reducing exchange rate volatility and
improving
macroeconomic policy environments, this paper considers the CTT first
and foremost
from the standpoint of revenue. With a view of establishing a
‘permissible’ range of tax
rates to obtain realistic estimates of revenue potential, it first
reviews the debate over the
effects of CTT on market liquidity and the efficiency of foreign
exchange markets, and
assesses the Spahn proposal for a two-tier currency tax. It then moves
to a discussion of
the technical and political feasibility of CTT, followed by an
evaluation of several new
proposals, such as those advanced by Schmidt and Mendez. The paper
presents revenue
estimates from CTT in light of recent changes in the composition and
structure of
foreign exchange markets.
DP2003/58
Andr頄ecoster and Inna Verbina:
Who Pays Indirect Taxes in Russia?
(PDF 395KB)
DP2003/51
Jaan Masso and Almas Heshmati:
Optimality and Overuse of Labour in Estonian
Manufacturing Enterprises (PDF 324KB)
DP2003/44
Mario Reyna-Cerecero and George Mavrotas:
Inflation, Output and Perfectly Enforceable Price
Controls in Orthodox and Heterodox Stabilization Programmes
(PDF 245KB)
DP2003/22
Birgitte Andersen and Marva Corley:
The Theoretical, Conceptual and Empirical
Impact of the Service Economy: A Critical Review (PDF
212KB)
DP2003/14
Roger Kelly and George Mavrotas:
Financial Sector
Development – Futile or Fruitful? An Examination of the Determinants of
Savings in Sri Lanka (PDF 169KB)
Using dynamic econometric techniques
the paper investigates the determinants of
private saving in Sri Lanka with a primary focus on the role of
financial sector
development. Empirical evidence is obtained indicating the existence of
the Ricardian
equivalence hypothesis, and the significance of credit constraints on
private saving.
Most significantly, an index of financial sector development variables
is constructed,
based on measures of the relative size of the financial sector, the
absolute size, and the
activity of financial intermediaries. The index is found to have a
significant positive
influence on the level of private saving, giving support to the
hypothesized nexus
between saving and financial sector development.
DP2003/13
Samuel Munzele Maimbo and George Mavrotas:
Financial Sector Reforms and Savings
Mobilization in Zambia (PDF 242KB)
DP2003/12
Roger Kelly and George Mavrotas:
>Savings and
Financial Sector Development: Panel Cointegration Evidence from Africa
(PDF 211KB)
The paper uses different measures of
financial sector development for a dynamic heterogeneous
panel of 17 African countries to examine the impact of financial sector
development on private
savings. An innovative econometric methodology is also employed related
to a series of
cointegration tests within a panel. This is an important contribution
since traditional panel data
analysis adopted in previous studies suffers from serious heterogeneity
bias problems. The
empirical results obtained vary considerably among countries in the
panel, thus highlighting the
importance of using different measures of financial sector development
rather than a single
indicator. The evidence is rather inconclusive, although in most of the
countries in the sample a
positive relationship between financial sector development and private
savings seems to hold.
The empirical analysis also suggests that a change in government
savings is offset by an
opposite change in private savings in most of the countries in the
panel, thus confirming the
Ricardian equivalence hypothesis. Liquidity constraints do not seem to
play a vital role in most
of the African countries in the group, since the relevant coefficient
is negative and significant in
only a small group of countries.
RP2004/15
Anja Shortland and David Stasavage:
Monetary
Policy in the CFA Zone: Country-level Credit Policy (PDF
201KB)
RP2004/14
Mireille Linjouom:
The
Costs and Benefits Analysis of CFA Membership: The Choice of an
Exchange Rate
Regime for the CFA Countries Zone (PDF 286KB)
RP2004/09
Simeon Coleman:
An
Aggregate View of Macroeconomic Shocks in Sub-Saharan Africa: A
Comparative
Study Using Innovation Accounting (PDF 419KB)
RP2004/17
David Fielding and Kalvinder Shields:
The
Impact of Monetary Union on Macroeconomic Integration: Evidence from
West Africa (PDF 332KB)
RP2006/53
Meredith Woo-Cumings:
The
Rule of Law, Legal Traditions, and Economic Growth in East Asia
(PDF
154KB)
This paper examines the literature on
the rule of law and economic development, and in
particular the influential argument by La Porta et al., on the
superiority of the Anglo-
American common law system in fostering financial development. In this
paper I show
that however compelling their argument might be, legal traditions and
institutions do
not determine the nature of the state, nor its likely role in the
economy—nor do they
critically determine the course of economic development. I build my
case by examining
the real and informal mechanisms of state intervention in the economy
in East Asia.
|