TY - JOUR
T1 - Governance and tax revenue
T2 - does foreign aid matter?
AU - Wen, Jun
AU - Farooq, Umar
AU - Tabash, Mosab I.
AU - El Refae, Ghaleb A.
AU - Subhani, Bilal Haider
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2021.
PY - 2023/3
Y1 - 2023/3
N2 - This study seeks to explores the relationship among governance, foreign aid, and tax revenue. A common notion on governance is that it is a multifaceted factor, it may affect from other factor that is foreign aid. Foreign aid can hamper the governance situation and thus can reduce tax collection. To test these theoretical assumptions, we collected the numerical data from Asian economies for the years 2001–2019 and employed the panel FMOLS (fully modified ordinary least square) test to estimate the regression. The empirical findings first reveal that governance and foreign aid have a positive association with tax revenue in the long run. However, a negative trend in tax collection was observed following the interaction of foreign aid and governance. Foreign aid deteriorates the governance situation, which has a negative spillover impact on tax revenue. Our empirical analysis suggests that policy officials should focus on exercising governance and foreign aid effectiveness to meet the objective of more tax collection. Points for practitioners: Policy officials should focus on better governance exercises. They should carefully decide on the volume of foreign aid receipts. However, if it becomes necessary to receive foreign aid, then they should focus on aid effectiveness. Such steps can benefit the practitioners to collect more tax.
AB - This study seeks to explores the relationship among governance, foreign aid, and tax revenue. A common notion on governance is that it is a multifaceted factor, it may affect from other factor that is foreign aid. Foreign aid can hamper the governance situation and thus can reduce tax collection. To test these theoretical assumptions, we collected the numerical data from Asian economies for the years 2001–2019 and employed the panel FMOLS (fully modified ordinary least square) test to estimate the regression. The empirical findings first reveal that governance and foreign aid have a positive association with tax revenue in the long run. However, a negative trend in tax collection was observed following the interaction of foreign aid and governance. Foreign aid deteriorates the governance situation, which has a negative spillover impact on tax revenue. Our empirical analysis suggests that policy officials should focus on exercising governance and foreign aid effectiveness to meet the objective of more tax collection. Points for practitioners: Policy officials should focus on better governance exercises. They should carefully decide on the volume of foreign aid receipts. However, if it becomes necessary to receive foreign aid, then they should focus on aid effectiveness. Such steps can benefit the practitioners to collect more tax.
KW - Asian economies
KW - cointegration analysis
KW - foreign aid
KW - governance
KW - tax revenue
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85120738738
U2 - 10.1177/00208523211056071
DO - 10.1177/00208523211056071
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85120738738
SN - 0020-8523
VL - 89
SP - 273
EP - 291
JO - International Review of Administrative Sciences
JF - International Review of Administrative Sciences
IS - 1
ER -