An Examination of Constraints of Taxing the Informal Sector and the Impact on Revenue Mobilisation in Zambia
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International Journal of Advanced Multidisciplinary Research and Studies
Abstract
Taxation is a fundamental tool for revenue generation,
economy building and sustainability, reducing market
externalities, regulating trade, stimulating representation and
achieving tax justice as well as building state accountability
and responsiveness. The informal sector in developing
countries generally and Zambia particularly has been
considered a hindrance to effective domestic revenue
mobilisation, hence the rejuvenated focus to bring the sector
into the tax baskets. Through a critical literature review, this
study sought to identify the varying motivations tabled by
the various stakeholders (policy-makers, scholars and tax
administrators) in literature on the need to administer tax on
this sector and to strengthen enforcement and to evaluate the
plausibility of these motives critically. A total of 34 journal
articles extracted from Goggle scholar, Research gate,
Semantic Scholar and JSTOR formed the literature review.
The factors were aggregated into five major groups: political
interference, high cost of collection, lack of formality and
limited potential for revenue. This study, therefore,
conducted a profound evaluative analysis of literature on
these factors, pinpointing any voids that future research
could address and accordingly sought to contribute to the
guidance offered to policy-makers on how to improve
informal sector. The study shows that political interference
with frequency of 12 at 35%, followed by limited revenue
potential with frequency of 9 at 26%, high cost of collection
with frequency of 8 at 24% and lack of formality at
frequency of 5 at 15% in that order.
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