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VAT Evasion in Bulgaria: A General-Equilibrium Approach
Author(s) -
Aleksandar Vasilev
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
review of economics and institutions
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2038-1379
DOI - 10.5202/rei.v8i2.243
Subject(s) - revenue , economics , evasion (ethics) , currency board , government revenue , econometrics , order (exchange) , general equilibrium theory , consumption tax , consumption (sociology) , welfare , international economics , microeconomics , indirect tax , monetary economics , public economics , currency , tax reform , market economy , accounting , finance , biology , social science , immune system , sociology , immunology
This paper utilizes an otherwise standard micro-founded general-equilibrium setup, which is augmented with a revenue-extraction mechanism to assess the magnitude of VAT evasion. The model is calibrated to Bulgaria after the introduction of the currency board (1999-2014), as one of the very few countries in Europe with a non-differentiated consumption tax rate, and an economy where VAT revenue makes almost half of total government tax revenue. A computational experiment performed within this setup estimates that on average, the size of evaded VAT is a bit more than one-fourth of output, an estimate which is in line with the figures provided in both Philip (2014) and the European Commission (2014). In addition, model-based simulations suggest that increases in spending on law and order could generate substantial welfare gains by decreasing VAT evasion.

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