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Fiscal policy, inequality, and poverty in Iran: assessing the impact and effectiveness of taxes and transfers.

Authors: Enami ALustig NTaqdiri A


Affiliations

1 Cornerstone Research, Two Embarcadero Center, 20th Floor, San Francisco, USA.
2 Department of Economics and CEQ Institute, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA, USA.
3 Brookings Institution, Center for Global Development, and Inter-American Dialogue.
4 Department of Economics, Concordia University, Montreal, Canada.

Description

Fiscal policy, inequality, and poverty in Iran: assessing the impact and effectiveness of taxes and transfers.

Middle East Dev J. 2019;11(1):49-74

Authors: Enami A, Lustig N, Taqdiri A

Abstract

Using the Iranian Household Expenditure and Income Survey for 2011/12, we estimate the impact and effectiveness of various components of Iran's fiscal system on reducing inequality and poverty. We utilize the marginal contribution analysis to determine the impact of each component, and we introduce newly developed indicators of effectiveness to calculate how well various taxes and transfers are operating to reduce inequality and poverty. We find that the fiscal system reduces the poverty-head-count-ratio by 10.5 percentage points and inequality by 0.0854 Gini points. Transfers are generally more effective in reducing inequality than taxes while taxes are especially effective in raising revenue without causing poverty to rise. Although transfers are not targeted toward the poor, they reduce poverty significantly. The main driver is the Targeted Subsidy Program (TSP), and we show through simulations that the poverty reducing impact of TSP could be enhanced if resources were more targeted to the bottom deciles.

PMID: 31565081 [PubMed]


Keywords: D31H22I38Incidence analysisIraneffectivenessenergy subsidy reformmarginal contribution


Links

PubMed: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31565081?dopt=Abstract

DOI: 10.1080/17938120.2019.1583510