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| Funder | U.S. Agency for International Development |
|---|---|
| Recipient Organization | Harvard University |
| Country | Ghana |
| Start Date | Mar 08, 2022 |
| End Date | Apr 21, 2025 |
| Duration | 1,140 days |
| Number of Grantees | 5 |
| Roles | Recipient |
| Data Source | US Foreign Aid |
| Grant ID | 220263-76 |
Funding for this research studies the role of technology in local-government tax collection capacity in the developing world.
We first conduct a new census of all local governments in Ghana to document a strong association between technology use and property tax billing, collection and enforcement. We then randomize the use of a new revenue collection technology within one large municipal government.
Revenue collectors using the new technology delivered 27 percent more bills and collected 103 percent more tax revenues than control collectors.
Collectors using the new technology learned faster about which households in their assigned areas were willing and able to make payments.
We reconcile these experimental findings in a simple Beckerian time-use model in which technology allows revenue collectors to better allocate their time towards households that are the most likely to comply with taxpaying duties.
The models predictions are consistent with experimental evidence showing that treatment collectors are more likely to target households with greater liquidity, income, awareness of taxpaying duties, and satisfaction with local public goods provision.
Harvard University
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