Azawad's Facebook Warriors: The MNLA, Social Media, and the Malian Civil War
In: Currents in Media, Social and Religious Movements in the Middle East Ser. v.2
98 results
Sort by:
In: Currents in Media, Social and Religious Movements in the Middle East Ser. v.2
In: IMF Working Papers
This paper addresses two fundamental issues in indirect tax design. It first revisits the case for reduced rates on items especially important to the poor, establishing conditions under which even very crudely targeted spending measures better serve their interests. It then explores the welfare costs from cascading taxes, showing that these may actually be lower the wider the set of inputs that are taxed but, more to the point?and contrary to the common notion that ?a low rate on a broad base? is always good tax policy?may plausibly be large even at a low nominal tax rate and with few stages o
In: IMF working paper 12/220
Issues of taxation and development, which have long been a central concern of the IMF, have attracted wider and renewed interest in the last few years. This paper reflects on three broad lessons of experience: that developing countries differ vastly in tax matters, and in ways that are less than fully understood; that the history of 'big ideas' in guiding tax reform for developing countries is decidedly mixed; and that the value of the emphasis often placed in this context on 'informality' is decidedly limited. It also asks whether ideas of 'state building' emphasized in some of the recent
In: IMF Working Papers
The financial crisis has prompted a reconsideration of the taxation of financial institutions, with practice outstripping principle: France, Germany, the United Kingdom and several other European countries have now introduced some form of bank tax, and the U.S. administration has revived its own proposal for such a charge. This paper considers the structure, appropriate rate, and revenue yield of corrective taxation of financial institutions addressed to two externalities, consequent on excessive risk-taking, prominent in the crisis: those that arise when such institutions are simply allowed t
In: IMF Working Papers
Like the theory of the second best that the 2006 congress marks, the VAT is now fifty years old. Judged by the extent and speed of its spread around the world, and the revenue that it raises, the VAT would seem to have been a remarkable success. Over the last few years, however, it has come under a series of attacks. This paper considers three of the most prominent of these. One is the fear (raised mainly in the United States) that the VAT actually does too good a job of raising tax revenue. The second is the view that the VAT does a bad job of taxing the informal sector-and that tariffs might
In: IMF Working Papers
This paper explores the implications of a distinctive feature of the value added tax (VAT) that is stressed by practitioners but essentially ignored by theorists: that it functions, in part, as a tax on the purchases of informal operators from formal sector businesses and, not least, on their imports. It stresses too the potential importance of the creditable withholding taxes that are levied by many developing countries-which have also been ignored. If both of these instruments are optimally deployed, it is shown, then the usual prescription that a small economy should not deploy tariffs rema
In: Working paper series Center for Economic Studies ; Ifo Institute ; 371
In: Conflict, security & development: CSD, Volume 21, Issue 3, p. 245-272
ISSN: 1478-1174
SSRN
Working paper
In: IMF Working Paper No. 13/57
SSRN
SSRN
SSRN
SSRN
In: IMF Working Papers, p. 1-30
SSRN