Globalization and Factor Income Taxation
How has globalization affected the relative taxation of labor and capital, and why To address this question, this paper builds and analyzes a new database of effective macroeconomic tax rates covering 150 countries since 1965, constructed by combin...
| Main Authors: | , , , | 
|---|---|
| Format: | Working Paper | 
| Language: | English | 
| Published: | 
        
      Washington, DC: World Bank    
    
      2022
     | 
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/790531647369435179/Globalization-and-Factor-Income-Taxation http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37160  | 
| Summary: | How has globalization affected the
            relative taxation of labor and capital, and why To address
            this question, this paper builds and analyzes a new database
            of effective macroeconomic tax rates covering 150 countries
            since 1965, constructed by combining national accounts data
            with government revenue statistics. Four main findings are
            obtained. (1) The effective tax rates on labor and capital
            have converged globally since the 1960s, due to a 10
            percentage-point increase in labor taxation and a 5
            percentage-point decline in capital taxation. (2) The
            decline in capital taxation is concentrated in high-income
            countries. By contrast, capital taxation has increased in
            developing countries since the 1990s, albeit from a low
            base. (3) Consistently across a variety of research designs,
            the findings show that the rise in capital taxation in
            developing countries can be explained by a tax capacity
            effect of international trade: trade openness leads to a
            concentration of economic activity in formal corporate
            structures, where capital taxes are easier to impose. (4) At
            the same time, international economic integration reduces
            statutory tax rates, due to increased tax competition. In
            high-income countries, this negative tax competition effect
            of trade has dominated, while in developing countries, the
            positive tax-capacity effect of international trade appears
            to have prevailed. | 
|---|