Reciprocity and willingness to pay taxes: evidence from a survey experiment in Latin America

Working papers in socioeconomic research

Reciprocity and willingness to pay taxes: evidence from a survey experiment in Latin America

Publication date: 2012-10-15

Authors: Ortega, Daniel ; Ronconi, Lucas ; Sanguinetti, Pablo

We provide the first experimental attempt at measuring reciprocity in tax collection in developing countries, where enforcement institutions are weak, and where tax rates and in general tax observance is lower. In a household survey carried out in 17 Latin American cities, we randomly provide respondents with positively or negatively information on the local Government's administration; this information significantly altered perceptions on the quality of the local government in two cities, and we find that in Rio de Janeiro -where a relative high degree of tax autonomy allows citizens to make a clear link between taxes and the provision of public services- people's perception on the quality of the local government can have sizable effects on their willingness to pay taxes.

Available languages

Currently we only have the publication in one language.

Technical sheet

Language: en

Country / Region: Latin America

Format: pdf

Licence

CC-BY-NC image
pencil icon

Unless otherwise stated, the licence for the item is described as CC-BY-NC

Cite publication

Ortega, Daniel; Ronconi, Lucas; Sanguinetti, Pablo. (2012). Reciprocity and willingness to pay taxes: evidence from a survey experiment in Latin America. Caracas: CAF

Authors

Ortega, Daniel

No. of publications 24

Ronconi, Lucas

No. of publications 3

Sanguinetti, Pablo

No. of publications 39

Recommended reading