Publication:
Taxes, Spending, and Equity: International Patterns and Lessons for Developing Countries

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2025-11-17
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2025-11-18
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Taxes and public spending underpin the basic administration of government and finance the human capital and infrastructure investments needed for economic growth. They can also have a significant and immediate impact on poverty and inequality. The question of how public finance can support longer-term growth objectives while promoting equity has become even more important in recent years, given the high fiscal deficits and debt levels most countries emerged with in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic. These included the increasing cost of debt and the need to restart environmentally sustainable growth while helping households address the learning losses and other social scars caused by the pandemic. This paper examines the global evidence on which households pay which taxes and who benefits from what spending, and critically, the net effect on different households across the income distribution. The aim is to identify the patterns and lessons that emerge for designing progressive fiscal policies. A global dataset of 96 countries is assembled, spanning all regions of the world and all national income levels, grounded in the Commitment to Equity (CEQ) approach to fiscal incidence.
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Wai-Poi, Matthew; Sosa, Mariano; Bachas, Pierre. 2025. Taxes, Spending, and Equity: International Patterns and Lessons for Developing Countries. Prosperity Insight Series. © World Bank. http://hdl.handle.net/10986/43998 License: CC BY-NC 3.0 IGO.
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