Does income inequality increase the shadow economy? Empirical evidence from Uganda

This paper applies the autoregressive distributed lag bounds testing method to investigate the long- and short-run relationship between the size of the shadow economy and income inequality in Uganda. The findings reveal evidence of the long and short-run relationship between the shadow economy and i...

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Main Author: Stephen Esaku
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2021-01-01
Series:Development Studies Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21665095.2021.1939082
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spelling doaj-61764647654c419a97ecafffa552c82a2021-06-21T13:17:38ZengTaylor & Francis GroupDevelopment Studies Research2166-50952021-01-018114716010.1080/21665095.2021.19390821939082Does income inequality increase the shadow economy? Empirical evidence from UgandaStephen Esaku0Kyambogo University (Soroti Campus)This paper applies the autoregressive distributed lag bounds testing method to investigate the long- and short-run relationship between the size of the shadow economy and income inequality in Uganda. The findings reveal evidence of the long and short-run relationship between the shadow economy and income inequality. We find that a rise in income inequality significantly increases the size of the shadow economy in Uganda, all else equal. These results are robust to the use of alternative econometric methods. At the policy level, instituting income redistribution policies to uplift the standard of the poor, improving resource allocation to productive sectors of the economy, reforming the tax system and macroeconomic environment, and implementing political and institutional reforms to address corruption could be viable policy options to address informality in Uganda.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21665095.2021.1939082income distributioninformal sectorincome inequalitygovernment spendingshadow economytaxation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stephen Esaku
spellingShingle Stephen Esaku
Does income inequality increase the shadow economy? Empirical evidence from Uganda
Development Studies Research
income distribution
informal sector
income inequality
government spending
shadow economy
taxation
author_facet Stephen Esaku
author_sort Stephen Esaku
title Does income inequality increase the shadow economy? Empirical evidence from Uganda
title_short Does income inequality increase the shadow economy? Empirical evidence from Uganda
title_full Does income inequality increase the shadow economy? Empirical evidence from Uganda
title_fullStr Does income inequality increase the shadow economy? Empirical evidence from Uganda
title_full_unstemmed Does income inequality increase the shadow economy? Empirical evidence from Uganda
title_sort does income inequality increase the shadow economy? empirical evidence from uganda
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Development Studies Research
issn 2166-5095
publishDate 2021-01-01
description This paper applies the autoregressive distributed lag bounds testing method to investigate the long- and short-run relationship between the size of the shadow economy and income inequality in Uganda. The findings reveal evidence of the long and short-run relationship between the shadow economy and income inequality. We find that a rise in income inequality significantly increases the size of the shadow economy in Uganda, all else equal. These results are robust to the use of alternative econometric methods. At the policy level, instituting income redistribution policies to uplift the standard of the poor, improving resource allocation to productive sectors of the economy, reforming the tax system and macroeconomic environment, and implementing political and institutional reforms to address corruption could be viable policy options to address informality in Uganda.
topic income distribution
informal sector
income inequality
government spending
shadow economy
taxation
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21665095.2021.1939082
work_keys_str_mv AT stephenesaku doesincomeinequalityincreasetheshadoweconomyempiricalevidencefromuganda
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