Tax Revenues in the Context of Economic Determinants

Despite the general recognition that taxes are generally a strong policy tool for assessing the macroeconomic impact of the country's alternative tax policies, taxes are often weakened by restrictions on tax revenue measurement. The aim of the contribution is to quantify the impact of selec...

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Main Authors: Alena Andrejovská, Veronika Puliková
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Montenegro - Faculty of Economics Podgorica 2018-03-01
Series:Montenegrin Journal of Economics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://mnje.com/sites/mnje.com/files/133-141_andrejovska_and_pulikova_rrr.pdf
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spelling doaj-9b1753c6f4ac4bb6bc73d8f3a43fbd692020-11-24T22:22:34ZengUniversity of Montenegro - Faculty of Economics PodgoricaMontenegrin Journal of Economics1800-58451800-66982018-03-0114113314110.14254/1800-5845/2018.14-1.10Tax Revenues in the Context of Economic DeterminantsAlena Andrejovská0Veronika Puliková1Faculty of Economics, Technical University of Košice, Slovak RepublicFaculty of Economics, Technical University of Košice, Slovak RepublicDespite the general recognition that taxes are generally a strong policy tool for assessing the macroeconomic impact of the country's alternative tax policies, taxes are often weakened by restrictions on tax revenue measurement. The aim of the contribution is to quantify the impact of selected macroeconomic indicators (gross domestic product, level of employment, public debt, foreign direct investments, effective tax rate, statutory tax rate) on the total amount of tax revenues, taking into account the tax competitiveness of the 28 EU member states. There was used methods of three models of regression analysis: the pooling model, the fixed effects model and the random effects model. The hypothesis that the gross domestic product has the greatest impact on tax revenue has been tested. In conclusion, the analysis confirmed that the strongest correlation is between tax revenues and employment rate. Followed by foreign direct investment and gross domestic product. Increasing these determinants by 1 mil. € (increase in employment by 1%) would increase tax revenues by 10 072 mil. € at the employment rate, by 383.1 thousand € for gross domestic product and by 434.2 thousand € for foreign direct investment. http://mnje.com/sites/mnje.com/files/133-141_andrejovska_and_pulikova_rrr.pdftax competitioncorporate taxationtax revenuecapital mobilityemployment rate
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alena Andrejovská
Veronika Puliková
spellingShingle Alena Andrejovská
Veronika Puliková
Tax Revenues in the Context of Economic Determinants
Montenegrin Journal of Economics
tax competition
corporate taxation
tax revenue
capital mobility
employment rate
author_facet Alena Andrejovská
Veronika Puliková
author_sort Alena Andrejovská
title Tax Revenues in the Context of Economic Determinants
title_short Tax Revenues in the Context of Economic Determinants
title_full Tax Revenues in the Context of Economic Determinants
title_fullStr Tax Revenues in the Context of Economic Determinants
title_full_unstemmed Tax Revenues in the Context of Economic Determinants
title_sort tax revenues in the context of economic determinants
publisher University of Montenegro - Faculty of Economics Podgorica
series Montenegrin Journal of Economics
issn 1800-5845
1800-6698
publishDate 2018-03-01
description Despite the general recognition that taxes are generally a strong policy tool for assessing the macroeconomic impact of the country's alternative tax policies, taxes are often weakened by restrictions on tax revenue measurement. The aim of the contribution is to quantify the impact of selected macroeconomic indicators (gross domestic product, level of employment, public debt, foreign direct investments, effective tax rate, statutory tax rate) on the total amount of tax revenues, taking into account the tax competitiveness of the 28 EU member states. There was used methods of three models of regression analysis: the pooling model, the fixed effects model and the random effects model. The hypothesis that the gross domestic product has the greatest impact on tax revenue has been tested. In conclusion, the analysis confirmed that the strongest correlation is between tax revenues and employment rate. Followed by foreign direct investment and gross domestic product. Increasing these determinants by 1 mil. € (increase in employment by 1%) would increase tax revenues by 10 072 mil. € at the employment rate, by 383.1 thousand € for gross domestic product and by 434.2 thousand € for foreign direct investment.
topic tax competition
corporate taxation
tax revenue
capital mobility
employment rate
url http://mnje.com/sites/mnje.com/files/133-141_andrejovska_and_pulikova_rrr.pdf
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