What You Do (Not) Get When Expanding the Net – Evidence from Forced Taxpayer Registrations in South Africa

Lediga, Collen; Riedel, Nadine; Strohmaier, Kristina

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

A significant share of firms in developing countries is not registered for income taxation. Expanding the tax net is a priority for many governments, but most formalization policies proved relatively ineffective in bringing firms into the tax net. Drawing on rich tax administrative data, we document that snapshot-synchronizations of the business tax and the commercial registry in South Africa led to a large-scale expansion of the South African business taxpayer net. While the targeted firms are a valuable segment within the non-formal sector, we show that their post-registration tax compliance is weak and few of them pay taxes. Owing to the large scope of the tax net expansion, the aggregate revenue gains are, nevertheless, non-negligible and the interventions are fiscally cost-effective. In additional analyses, we provide evidence for enforcement spillovers: In areas where many firms were drawn into the tax net, tax registration timing compliance significantly improved after the snapshot synchronizations. We find no indication of a drop in registration numbers at the commercial registry.

Details about the publication

JournalJournal of Development of Economics
Volume172
Article number103388
StatusPublished
Release year2025
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.1016/j.jdeveco.2024.103388
KeywordsFormalization policy; Tax authority digitization; Developing countries

Authors from the University of Münster

Riedel, Nadine
Professorship for public and regional economics