Working paper

Taxability, Elections, and Government Support of Business Activity

Year:

2002

Published in:

University of California

Authors:

tax revenues
politicians
business support
taxability
postcommunist countries

Politicians care about tax revenues in part because they pay for transfers or public goods which are important to voters, and which are thus important for the politician’s reelection. When economic sectors differ in their taxability, i.e. the degree to which tax revenues can be extracted by the state, politicians will thus have an incentive to allocate their support for business activity unevenly across sectors. Formalization of this idea shows that politicians will be more inclined to favor high-taxability sectors when transfers or public goods are highly valued by voters, but less likely to do so when a country’s overall tax capacity is high. Further, the allocation of support will depend on the relative size of the low- and high-taxability sectors, but not on the number of recipients of government transfers. Drawing upon a survey of firms in twenty-three postcommunist countries - where overall tax capacity is in many places quite low, differences in taxability across sectors is typically high, and government support for business activity is often lacking - the model’s predictions are shown to hold generally in countries with well-developed political rights and civil liberties, but only partially in the rest of the postcommunist world. Politicians in more democratic countries seem to be motivated by the electoral concerns central to this paper, while their counterparts in less democratic states appear to be motivated by revenue considerations for nonelectoral reasons.

Other publications by

50 publications found

2015
Journal article

Does Reform Prevent Rebellion? Evidence From Russia’s Emancipation of the Serfs

Publisher: Comparative Political Studies

Authors: Scott Gehlbach, Evgeny Finkel, Tricia D. Olsen

2010
Journal article

The Contribution of Veto Players to Economic Reform

Publisher: The Journal of Politics

Authors: Scott Gehlbach, Edmund J. Malesky

2023
Journal article

Damaged Collateral And Firm‑Level Finance: Evidence From Russia’s War In Ukraine

Publisher: Journal of Comparative Economics

Authors: Solomiya Shpak, John S. Earle, Scott Gehlbach, Mariia Panga

2016
Journal article

Cooperating with the State: Evidence from Survey Experiments on Policing

Publisher: Journal of Experimental Political Science

Authors: Scott Gehlbach, Lauren A. McCarthy, Noah Buckley, Timothy Frye

2017
Journal article

(Good) Land and Freedom (for Former Serfs): Determinants of Peasant Unrest in European Russia, March–October 1917

Publisher: Slavic Review

Authors: Scott Gehlbach, Dmitrii Kofanov, Evgeny Finkel

2016
Journal article

Is Putin’ Popularity Real?

Publisher: Post-Soviet Affairs

Authors: Scott Gehlbach, Timothy Frye, Kyle L. Marquardt, Ora John Reuter

2014
Book Chapter

The Grand Experiment That Wasn’t?

Publisher: Cambridge University Pres

Authors: Scott Gehlbach, Edmund J. Malesky

2016
Journal article

Formal Models of Nondemocratic Politics

Publisher: Annual Review of Political Science

Authors: Scott Gehlbach, Konstantin Sonin, Milan W. Svolik

2020
Working paper

Reform and Rebellion in Weak States

Publisher: Cambridge University Pres

Authors: Scott Gehlbach, Evgeny Finkel

2020
Journal article

Democratization as a Continuous Choice: A Comment on Acemoglu and Robinson’s Correction to “Why Did the West Extend the Franchise?”

Publisher: The Journal of Politics

Authors: Scott Gehlbach, Steven Nafziger, Paul Castañeda Dower, Evgeny Finkel