Affiliation:
1. CUNEF Univ. & CEPR miguel.almunia@cunef.edu
2. Columbia Univ. & CEPR & NBER hjort@columbia.edu
3. J-PAL justine.knebelmann@psemail.eu
4. INSEAD & CEPR lin.tian@insead.edu
Abstract
Abstract
Are firms sophisticated maximizers, or do they appear to make mistakes? Using transactions data from Ugandan value-added tax returns, we show that sellers and buyers report different amounts 79% of the time, despite invoices being easily cross-checked. Our estimates suggest that most firms are “advantageous misreporters“, but that 25% are “disadvantageous misreporters” who systematically overreport own sales minus purchases such that their tax liability increases. Similarly, many firms—especially disadvantageous misreporters—fail to VAT-report imported inputs they themselves reported at Customs, increasing their liability. On net, unilateral VAT misreporting cost Uganda about US$384 million in foregone 2013-2016 tax revenue.
Subject
Economics and Econometrics,Social Sciences (miscellaneous)
Cited by
8 articles.
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