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Tax Policy Under the Curse of Low Revenues: The Case of Romania by Daniel Daianu, Professor of Economics, SNSPA Bucharest Ella Kallai, Chief Economist, Alpha Bank Romania Laurian Lungu, Cardiff Business School and Macroanalitica October 18, 2011, Bucharest Agenda: • Motivation • The Current Crisis and the Role of Fiscal Policy Intervention in the EU, 2009-2010 • Taxes and Tax Revenues: the Romanian Experience • Changes after the Introduction of the Flat Tax • Taxpayers – Households and Companies • The Shadow Economy – Implications for Tax Revenues • Policy Recommendations 2 Motivation Markets’ debt tolerance reduced Transition to harder budget constraints in public sector •Is it due to poverty? •Are legal taxes too small? • Is it due to tax structure? •Is collection inefficiency to blame? •Is it due to taxpayers? •Is it tax evasion and shadow economy? Low budget revenues •Limit redistribution •Constrain public investment and supply of public goods Why budget revenues are low? How budget revenues can be raised? 3 Current crisis and the role of fiscal policy intervention in the EU 10 Lu 5 stimulus (+)/consolidation (-) 20092010, %GDP stimulus (+)/consolidation (-) 20092010, %GDP 10 0 RO -5 Sk Gr Mt Hu Bg -10 -15 Ie Lv -20 Ee Lt -25 Lu 5 Sk 0 -5 Mt RO Gr Bg Hu -10 -15 Ie Lv -20 Lt Ee -25 0 30 60 90 120 General government gross debt 2009, %GDP 150 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 Tax revenue sensitivity to economic activity • Fiscal austerity, or economic policies that compensate intense deleveraging in the private sector growth? Short-term vs. medium/long-term fiscal correction. • Large scale fiscal adjustment, in numerous developed countries, was needed even before the crisis in order to deal with pensions and health care costs. EU27: 2007 vs 2010. Government deficit: 1% vs 7% of GDP. Public debt: 59% vs. 80% of GDP • Scale and composition of adjustment tailored to the specific conditions of individual countries. Source: OECD, Commission services & 2010 Taxation trends 4 Current crisis and the role of fiscal policy intervention in the EU (Cont’d) • Consolidation was larger than stimulus measures; Scope of fiscal stimulus was reduced in countries confronted with liquidity crises (Romania included) • The rise in EU aggregate public debt (by 1/3) is caused by: 1. fall in tax receipts; 2. automatic stabilisers; 3. fiscal measures to mitigate decline; 4. bank bail-outs • Ireland and Spain epitomize the role of excessive private sector indebtedness in undermining financial stability and public debt sustainability • Public debt sustainability hinges on economic competitiveness and growth prospects (ex: Germany has a larger public debt than Spain) 5 The current crisis and the role of fiscal policy intervention in the EU, 2009-2010 (Cont’d) • The case of NMSs: • Except Hungary, NMSs had low public debts before the crisis hit; • A liquidity crisis threatened several NMSs which had run large (double digit) external deficits and relied on heavy external borrowing • Countries implementing fiscal stimulus have debt between 15-100% of GDP • The size of public debt is not always conclusive for making a judgment on the need for immediate fiscal consolidation • Not the size of gross debt-to-GDP drove the scale of stimulation/ consolidation, but markets’ debt intolerance and tax revenue sensitivity; 6 The Romanian Experience Revenues and expenditures of consolidated budget % 0 Romanian tax revenue-to-GDP gap -2 -4 -6 -8 -10 -12 -14 -16 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 %GDP 43 41 39 37 35 33 31 29 27 25 total revenues tax revenues total expenditure vs. NMS vs. EU-27 • Objective: examine Romanian tax revenues performance over the last two decades; look at stylised facts of tax revenues, their dynamics, and tax policies • The decline in consolidated budget revenues in the 90s: • a “disorganisation effect” due to economic regime change • shrinking of the tax base; number of employees fell by 35% over ’89-’98 • tax rate cuts, adjustments in income tax brackets, tax exemptions/holiday • Low tax revenues/GDP compared to NMSs (5% gap in 2009) and EU-27 (9% gap in 2009) all over the last two decades Source: Eurostat, European Commission Spring Forecast 2011 7 The Romanian experience (cont’d) Is poverty responsible for low tax revenue? The thesis that this is normal for an emerging economy does not stand scrutiny: Bulgaria, Montenegro and Serbia collect more than Romania as % of GDP GDP/capita, US$ 2009 2006 2007 2008 2009 Tax revenue-to-GDP ratio Albania 3,808 23 23.6 24.3 23.5 Bulgaria 6,423 34.1 34.8 33.3 30.6 Croatia 14,222 35.1 35.2 35.2 34.1 Macedonia 4,515 27.9 27.8 27.4 26.1 Montenegro 6,635 35.1 37.8 37.1 35.5 Romania 7,500 28.5 29 28 27.9 Serbia 5,872 38.2 36.8 35.8 35.5 Source: Albania-IMF 2010 Article IV Consultation Preliminary Conclusion of the Mission March 19, 2010, IMF Country Report 09/73; Bulgaria-and Romania European Commission, Croatia-IMF Country Report 10/179 and 9/185, Macedonia IMF Country Report 11/42, Montenegro-IMF Country Report 9/88 and 11/100; Serbia-IMF Country Report 9/158, 10/25 and 11/95 8 The Romanian experience (cont’d) % 60 Romania Legal tax rates Are legal tax rates too small in Romania? NMS 50 2000-2004 40 30 20 10 0 2000-2004 2005-2008 VAT 2000-2004 PIT CIT 2005-2008 SSC 2000-2004 cuts were made to all main taxes: • SSC (60% to 49%), • Corporate income tax (38% to 25%), • VAT (22% to 19%). These eroded the tax revenue to GDP ratio. Source: European Commission, IMF •VAT,PIT,CIT comparable with average NMS •SSC much higher than the NMSs average 2005-2008 •VAT,PIT,CIT smaller than NMSs average •SSC remained higher than NMSs average 9 Changes in Tax Revenues After the Flat Tax phased in Direct taxes Personal income tax (PIT) Corporate income tax (CIT) other Social Security Contributions (SSC) Indirect taxes VAT Excise duties & consumption tax Other taxes on products (import duties including) Employees Employers Self employed +non-employed ~consumption tax Other taxes on production PIT+SSC (compulsory) ~ labour tax CIT+PIT+ other taxes on products + other tax on production ~ capital tax 10 Source: Eurostat Changes in tax revenues after the flat tax phased in (Cont’d) Tax revenue Tax revenue (including SSC) 45 EU-27 Romania NMS 40 14 EU-27 Romania NMS 12 35 10 %GDP 30 %GDP 25 20 15 8 6 4 10 5 2 0 0 2000-2004 2005-2008 2000-2004 2005-2008 2000-2004 2005-2008 actual cyclically adjusted 2000-2004 2005-2008 2000-2004 2005-2008 2000-2004 2005-2008 VAT PIT CIT SSC other • Budgetary effects difficult to estimate. • Macroeconomic effects of flat tax introduction also difficult to disentangle from the post-EU accession economic growth effects (massive capital inflows which bolstered tax receipts) After 2005 • No change in tax revenue as % of GDP; cyclically adjusted tax revenue has declined • VAT increased and PIT increased marginally as % of GDP:;SSC declined; No change in CIT 11 • Only VAT approaches and CIT is slightly above NMS level, potential for other taxes Source: Eurostat (excise, royalty, environmental taxes) Changes in Tax Revenues After the Flat Tax phased in (Cont’d) 16 By tax categories EU-27 Romania NMS By economic functions of taxes 25 EU-27 Romania NMS 14 20 12 15 %GDP %GDP 10 8 10 6 4 5 2 0 0 2000-2004 2005-2008 2000-2004 2005-2008 2000-2004 2005-2008 indirect taxes direct taxes SSC 2000-2004 2005-2008 2000-2004 2005-2008 2000-2004 2005-2008 tax on consumption tax on labour tax on capital •The main pillars of tax revenues •indirect taxes and SSC •consumption tax and labor tax After 2005 •The revenues from indirect taxes increased compensating the decline of SSC •Revenues from consumption tax exceeded the revenue from labour tax 12 Source: Eurostat Implicit Tax Rates and Tax Collection Efficiency % 80 Rom ania % 80 70 70 60 60 50 50 40 40 30 30 20 20 10 10 0 0 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 VAT households' income tax corporate income tax social security contribution NMSs 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 VAT households' income tax corporate income tax social security contribution • Graphs above show the ratio between implicit tax and legal tax, the closest to 100%, the most efficient tax collection/compliance is. • Corporate income tax is collected in a proportion of 33% of potential, rising after 2004. • There is a relatively high degree of tax compliance by individuals • Efficiency of SSC collection far below other NMSs • VAT collection efficiency also lower • Differences can be explained by tax exemptions, loopholes and more tax avoidance possibilities in Romania vs NMSs 13 Source: own computation based on Eurostat Implicit Tax Rates and Tax Collection Efficiency (Cont’d) VAT 25.0 R omania gap= 9% NMS gap= 7.3% gap= 7.4% gap= 5.8% 20.0 • Revenues from VAT,SSC,PIT and CIT 80% of tax revenues % 15.0 10.0 After 2005: 5.0 0.0 2000-2004 2005-2008 legal tax rate 2000-2004 2005-2008 implic it tax rate SSC 60.0 50.0 R omania gap= 26.9% NMS gap= 20.7% gap= 9.3% gap= 11.1% % 40.0 30.0 20.0 10.0 0.0 2000-2004 2005-2008 legal tax rate 2000-2004 2005-2008 implic it tax rate Source: Eurostat, European Commission Taxation trends, 206-2011 • Tax collection efficiency increased for both VAT and SSC (gap between legal tax rate and implicit tax rate reduced) • Tax collection efficiency for VAT approaches NMSs performance • SSC collection efficiency remained far bellow NMSs performance 14 Implicit Tax Rates and Tax Collection Efficiency(Cont’d) C IT 30.0 25.0 R omania gap= 19.8% gap= 18% 20.0 Before 2005: NMS gap= 12.7% % gap= 10.2% • CIT collection efficiency was better than in NMSs 15.0 After 2005: 10.0 5.0 0.0 2000-2004 2005-2008 legal tax rate 2000-2004 2005-2008 implic it tax rate P IT 30.0 25.0 NMS gap= 15.8% gap= 19.1% gap= 8.3% gap= 13.6% % 20.0 R omania 15.0 10.0 • Tax collection efficiency of PIT and CIT improved • The gap between legal taxes rates and implicit tax rates more than halved for PIT • Tax efficiency for both PIT and CIT exceeds the efficiency from NMSs (lower gaps between legal and implicit tax rates) 5.0 0.0 2000-2004 2005-2008 legal tax rate 2000-2004 2005-2008 implic it tax rate Source: Eurostat, European Commission Taxation trends, 206-2011 15 Taxpayers: Tax Revenues %GDP 17 Personal income tax and social contribution paid by individuals 15 13 11 9 7 5 ro EU27 NMS % GDP 12.5 12 11.5 11 10.5 10 9.5 9 8.5 Corporate income tax and social contribution paid by employers ro EU27 NMS • The taxes paid by employers was around 9% of GDP (2002-2008) and 8.5% of GDP in 2009; • Taxes paid by individuals increased from near 5% of GDP in 2005 to 7% of GDP in 2009; • Voluntary payment compliance for all taxpayers was 78.9% in 2010 Source: European Commission, Taxation trends in 2011 16 Taxpayers: Households (HH) Taxes* paid by households Number of households 1.5 4.5 11 17 8 77 employees HH agricultural HH 37 44 retiree HH other HH employees HH agricultural HH retiree HH other HH Households' income-to-GDP/capita % 50 45 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 emploees HH agricultural HH retiree HH 2000-2004 2005-2008 2000-2004 2005-2008 2000-2004 2005-2008 In 2009 • 37% of HH are employee HH and pay 77% of HHs’ taxes • The tax revenue from agricultural income extremely small • 44% of HH retirees and pay 1.3% of HHs’ taxes In 2005-2008 • Employees HH average annual income ~ 44% of GDP/capita • Agricultural HH average annual income ~ 25%of GDP/capita • Retiree HH average annual income ~36% of GDP Note: * taxes on wages, pensions, independent activities, social security contribution, unemployment contribution and health insurance Source: Households budget survey, INSSE 17 Taxpayers: Households (Cont’d) Household's budget income % income 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 emploees HH agricultural HH retiree HH • Still large is the un-taxable part of households income (in-kind income mainly from own agricultural products) after the post 2005 decline (8% for employee HH, 44% for agricultural HH and 21% for retiree HH) 2000-2004 2005-2008 2000-2004 2005-2008 2000-2004 2005-2008 gross salaries independent activities own agricultural products other % income 50 45 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 social provision Households' taxes and social benefit emploees HH agricultural HH retiree HH • The higher the in-kind income the lower the tax contribution 2000-2004 2005-2008 2000-2004 2005-2008 2000-2004 2005-2008 taxes social benefit Source: Households budget survey, INSSE 18 Taxpayers: Households (Cont’d) Households' income-to-GDP/capita, by income deciles % d1 d2 d3 d4 d5 d6 d7 d8 d9 d10 100 80 60 40 20 0 • 80% of HH have the average annual income lower than 60% of GDP/capita • Only the richest 10% of households’ annual average income exceeds the GDP/capita Source: Households budget survey, INSSE 19 Taxpayers: Households (Cont’d) Households' taxes and social benefit, by income deciles taxes social benefit % income 30 d1 d2 d3 d4 d5 d6 d7 d8 d9 d10 25 20 15 10 5 0 After 2005 • More than 25% of 70% of households’ average income represents social benefits • The share of social benefits in the richest 10% of households’ average income increased, while the share of taxes has declined Source: Households budget survey, INSSE 20 Taxpayers: Households (Cont’d) Households' taxes and social benefit shares taxes social benefit % total 40 d1 d2 d3 d4 d5 d6 d7 d8 d9 d10 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 After 2005 • The tax burdenslightly shifted towards the middle income 60% of households; they pay 42.6% of total taxes (vs. 41% before 2005) • The poorest 20% of households pay 1.9% of taxes (vs. 2.1% before 2005) • The richest 20% of households pay 55.5% of taxes (vs. 56.9% before 2005) • The tax contribution of all households increased, excepting the richest 10% of households Source: Households budget survey, INSSE 21 Taxpayers: Companies % GDP 5.0 Fig. A3.1 Arrears to consolidated general budget, by type 5.03 0.26 4.0 2.40 3.0 2.0 1.0 % GDP 3.0 3.7 0.12 2.89 1.73 0.10 0.19 3.36 1.30 0.15 2.19 Fig. A3.2 Arrears to consolidated general budget of state companies, by type 1.69 0.15 1.34 2.51 0.09 1.09 0.08 2.3 0.14 3.57 0.09 1.50 1.60 0.12 0.13 1.66 1.76 2.0 1.03 0.83 1.0 0.12 1.22 0.0 1.89 0.04 0.04 1.14 0.04 0.99 1.48 0.05 1.4 0.04 0.55 0.04 0.79 0.78 0.03 0.61 1.99 0.04 2.07 0.04 0.78 0.79 0.05 0.06 1.13 1.18 0.0 dec.2005 dec.2006 dec.2007 dec.2008 dec.2009 iun.2010 social insurance special funds state budget local budgets dec.2005 dec.2006 dec.2007 dec.2008 dec.2009 iun.2010 social insurance special funds state budget local budgets • CIT revenues 2.5% of GDP; SSC paid by employers 6.1% of GDP in 2009. • Arrears a systemic problem. Arrears to GCB rose to 4.2% of PIB in 2010. • 45% of the arrears to the consolidated budget represent arrears to state budget • More than half of tax arrears are created by state companies • Mining, manufacturing and services are major arrears generators: they generate 30.5%, 21% and 21% respectively of all arrears to GCB Source: Eurostat, European Commission Spring Forecast 2011 22 The Shadow Economy – Implications for Tax Revenues GDP shadow economy (bn RON) GDP shadow economy as % of 2010 GDP Total fiscal evasion (as % of GDP), of which: SSC VAT PIT 180 35 16.0 5.9 8.4 1.8 139 27 12.3 4.5 6.5 1.4 98 19 8.7 3.2 4.6 1.0 • Estimations of the shadow economy vary substantially – 3 scenarios considered • If the size of the shadow economy were 27% of GDP, or RON 139 Ron, fiscal evasion would amount to some 12.3% of GDP. In this case, full compliance of paying taxes would bring to the budget revenues equivalent to 12.3% of GDP (assuming a VAT rate of 24%). VAT revenues alone would rise by 6.5% of GDP Source: European Commission Spring Forecast 2011 23 Shadow Economy, Estimated Size (Cont’d) Share of informal economy brought to light 0.3 0.5 0.7 The size of the informal economy, % of total output SSC VAT PIT Increase in budgetary revenues SSC VAT PIT Increase in budgetary revenues SSC VAT PIT Increase in budgetary revenues 35 1.0 1.5 0.4 2.9 27 0.8 1.1 0.3 2.2 19 0.6 0.8 0.2 1.6 1.7 2.4 0.7 4.8 1.3 1.9 0.5 3.7 0.9 1.3 0.4 2.6 2.4 3.4 1.0 6.8 1.8 2.6 0.8 5.2 1.3 1.9 0.5 3.7 • Diminishing the size of informal economy would have considerable positive budgetary implications Source: European Commission Spring Forecast 2011 24 Conclusions and Policy Recommendations • Fiscal consolidation is not achieved. Tolerance of markets to high budget deficits is increasingly lower. • Tax revenues to GDP ratio in Romania is extremely low there is much leeway for raising the revenue/GDP ratio significantly. How to do it? • Need a fiscal strategy for the long term. Define a clear tax policy concept: tax more personal income or consumption? Such an approach involves a forwardlooking attitude to tax policy. • Any change in fiscal policy should have its main objective in keeping budget deficit below 3% of GDP in the medium and long term - and as close to zero as possible. • Strive towards achieving optimal tax – more analyses need to be done here. The implicit tax rates suggest the current tax structure is not optimal. 25 Policy recommendations (Cont’d) • Is there a potential to raise the tax base? Potential tax adjustments relating to household’s wealth (including agricultural land) or royalties. However, such tax adjustments should pay attention to household’s work/saving incentives, poverty of many farmers, as well as the effects on companies’ investment plans. • Fiscal strategy should focus on fiscal consolidation. Fiscal consolidation should target raising fiscal revenues, since there is an enormous leeway in this respect. Follow a ratio of 4:1 between reduced government spending and tax increases? Fiscal consolidation should entail restructuring government spending to support economic growth. • EU funds could much mitigate the pains and pro-cyclicality of fiscal consolidation in an adverse external environment. 26 Policy recommendations (Cont’d) • Changes in fiscal policy should be pre-announced after comprehensive analyses estimating the impact of the changes on the economy. Predictability of fiscal policy is paramount in times of global uncertainty. • Pay attention to the impact of the EU governance reform • Reduce shadow economy: compliance procedures, efficiency in detecting non-compliance, severe penalties for those who practice and perpetrate tax evasion (including lay-offs of public sector employees) • Increase administrative effectiveness and efficiency : Consolidating local tax offices; Improving information systems and information technology management as well as the operational capacity; Improve human resource management function and strategy • Stimulate domestic savings via tax allowances and support activities that can improve Romania’s competitiveness – the fairness concept 27 Adopt a ‘Transparency and Credibility’ Package • Causes for low tax revenues collection: • Weaknesses of institutions responsible for collecting tax revenues • Population’s perception that the value of public services offered in exchange for the taxes it pays is extremely low • Fairness. Government spending on various projects is often perceived ( and sometimes it is proved to be so) to be made to firms belonging to a political clientele • Individual ethical conduct, an important disciplining device based on the principle of self regulation, is permanently dissuaded 28 Adopt A ‘Transparency and Credibility’ Package; Suggestions • Announce full transparency of government spending programs- open bidding process; spending benchmarks. • Announce clear strategies for investments in infrastructure, health care and education by nominating specific projects together with their costs and completion time. • Local public utilities: have tariffs and costs be published on the internet so as to foster benchmarking and competition. • Cost-benefit analysis should be done effectively (no public investment above a certain threshold be done without such a thorough analysis). 29 Adopt A ‘Transparency and Credibility’ Package; Suggestions (Cont’d) • Budgeting and human resource management in the public sector should shift from inputs to objectives and performance. • Set up an independent Audit Office to monitor public sector spending. • Make it easier for companies and individuals to pay their taxes. Simplify tax forms and improve mechanisms for online payment. • Announce a firm plan for tax reductions (SSCs for instance).The plan should have a 2-3 years horizon and its continuation should be conditional on the increased compliance in paying taxes. • Raise penalties for tax evasion so that these would act as a deterrent. 30 Tax Policy Under the Curse of Low Revenues: The Case of Romania by Daniel Daianu, Professor of Economics, SNSPA Bucharest Ella Kallai, Chief Economist, Alpha Bank Romania Laurian Lungu, Cardiff Business School and Macroanalitica October 18, 2011, Bucharest