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Global Tax Program

Knowledge Note May 25, 2024

This Knowledge Note discusses the importance of accounting for gender issues in tax compliance by identifying knowledge gaps and recommending collaboration between governments, the World Bank, and partners to generate evidence using sex-disaggregated administrative data, surveys, and focus group discussions.

BLOG March 25, 2024

In this blog, we delve into the crucial issue of women's economic empowerment in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan, through the lens of tax and property reforms. Discover how the region is tackling gender disparities with initiatives like the KP Women Empowerment Policy Framework, the appointment of female patwaris, and the digitization of tax and property services, aiming to enhance female economic participation and property ownership.

BLOG March 14, 2024

This blog explores a recent World Bank study on Bangladesh, revealing how agricultural import tariffs negatively impact rural women's employment and earnings. With women predominantly employed in agriculture, higher tariffs on essential inputs like animal feed disproportionately affect their economic activities. The findings emphasize the need for gender-informed tariff reforms to enhance women's employment and income levels.

Blog March 8, 2024

How do tax and customs administrations impact economic activities led by women in low- and middle-income countries? Our latest blog uncovers the role these entities play in either facilitating or hindering female economic participation.

RESEARCH February 20, 2024

Using two rounds of survey data and the tax code, this paper analyzes the equity and gender implications of the presumptive tax on small and microenterprises in Ethiopia.

Knowledge Note December 1, 2023

The Integrating Gender Equality into Tax Reform project team of the Global Tax Program recently produced a Knowledge Note on Building Gender Equality Objectives in Tax and Customs Administration¡±. This Knowledge Note provides a broad overview of issues in building gender equality in tax and customs administration reforms, which is a key step in achieving equitable domestic revenue mobilization. It suggests entry points to support gender equality in tax and customs administrations reforms and improve the gender balance within the workforce.

Gender Equality and Tax Reform


  • Taxation can be a powerful tool to through changing incentives and behavior towards better gender equality outcomes. A well-functioning and progressive tax system can help promote gender equality. Yet, seemingly neutral tax policies and administration practices can reinforce existing gender disparities when they intersect with structural differences and social norms that perpetuate inequality. However, there is a lack of evidence-based knowledge and granular analysis, particularly in the context of low- and middle-income countries.

    Since September 2021, with the support of the Government of the United Kingdom, the Global Tax Program¡¯s Integrating Gender Equality into Tax Reform Project has been providing direct policy advice to governments and producing analytical work that leverages the impact of the World Bank instruments (e.g., lending operations or diagnostic tools). It has also produced global knowledge products that facilitate sex-disaggregated analysis of tax policies.

    ľ¹ÏÓ°Ôº is well-suited to develop a work program on gender equality and tax reform. With a presence in over 130 countries and a diverse staff from 170 countries, including those in low- and middle-income countries, we have a global reach. Our analytical work supports lending operations and policy discussions with key officials in the Ministries of Finance and Tax/Revenue Departments, as well as local academic institutions and civil society. The Global Tax Team at the World Bank consists of experts with strong technical skills and global knowledge, enabling us to support in-country teams and clients as well as facilitate knowledge sharing across countries.

    Priority Areas

    The overall objective of the Integrating Gender Equality into Tax Reform Project is to help improve the capacity of low-and middle-income countries to formulate tax policies and tax administration reforms that contribute to gender equality goals. The project is organized around two pillars:

    • Pillar 1 activities aim to support governments in the design and implementation of tax policy reform programs that include gender equality objectives - and when relevant, incidence study of these policies - through World Bank technical assistance.
    • Pillar 2 activities aim to support tax and customs administration reforms and processes that include gender equality objectives through World Bank technical assistance.

     

    Select examples of our work

    The ongoing work supported by GTP illustrates how the analytical and policy work on the gender analysis of tax policy and tax administration leverages World Bank lending operations or diagnostic tools to contribute to promoting gender equality.

    Pakistan

    The gender and taxpayer in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) Province, Pakistan, is an example of high-quality analytics to support World Bank operations - the ongoing International Development Association (IDA) funded USD$118 million project, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Revenue Mobilization and Public Resource Management Program (KPRMP). It provided advisory support on how the World Bank¡¯s lending operation could integrate gender equality objectives in supporting the provincial revenue authorities ¨C through tailoring tax service provision to meet women¡¯s needs, human resource management and investments to recruit and retain women, and generating sex-disaggregated data.

    Bangladesh

    The on the gender implications of import tariffs in Bangladesh is an example of analytical work that contributed to the World Bank¡¯s Public Expenditure Review, which is the core diagnostic that country teams use to have a policy dialogue with the government on tax and customs policies. The study showed how the current tariff policy adversely impacted female agricultural producers more than male producers because of the gender roles and division of labor in agricultural production.  

    Brazil

    A technical knowledge on the gender and property tax in S?o Paulo, Brazil, contributes to expanding the evidence base on the implications of tax policy on gender equality. The study also shows innovative and replicable ways in which administrative property data could be sex-disaggregated in the absence of such data and has made the statistical codes publicly available on GitHub.

    Ethiopia

    The on gender and the rural land tax in Ethiopia shows that because it is considered inappropriate for women to plow land or use oxen, sharecropping arrangements are often used when no men are available to till land, resulting in women receiving only half of the agricultural yield. Even if the farm sizes and, therefore, the tax liabilities are the same in an area-based land tax system, female landowners disproportionately bear a larger tax burden than their male counterparts because of the lower yield and consumption.

    Partnership with regional organizations for tax administrations

    The project team has developed a partnership with the regional network organization for tax administrations in Africa, the African Tax Administrative Forum (ATAF), by presenting at the training for tax administrators at the ATAF Women in Tax Network Leadership Conference and contributing to the capacity building program to sex-disaggregate tax administrative data. The impact of capacity building of tax administrations is leveraged by working through a regional organization, such as ATAF.

    Global Knowledge Products

    The project team has been producing several knowledge notes to highlight .

    Ongoing work

    There are new knowledge notes in production that will unpack key gender issues in , tax compliance, tax policies for affordable childcare, and the presumptive tax on small and microenterprises in Ethiopia, Rwanda, Tanzania, and more.

     

  • Publications and Research:

    • (Journal Article)
    •  (Policy Research Working Paper)
    •  (Journal Article)
    •  | Policy Research Working Paper, July 2022
    •  (CEQ) | Presentation by Caren Grown, GTP Senior Technical Advisor on Gender Equality and Tax Reform, Training Workshop on CEQ and Fiscal Incidence Analysis in Ethiopia, June 27-29, 2022
    •  | Policy Research Working Paper, June 2021
    •  | Brief, June 2021
    •  | Survey Brief, June 2021
    •  | Central Statistics Agency of Ethiopia, June 2021
    • Knowledge Note: Tax-based support for childcare (We are updating it with additional information. It will be up shortly.)

    Blogs:

    • | World Bank, March, 2024
    •  | World Bank, March, 2024
    •  | World Bank, September 2023
    •  | World Bank, October 2022
    •  | World Bank, July 2022
    • | World Bank, September 2020

    Events & Stakeholder Engagements:

    • The 2023 Dialogue on Tax and SDGs, hosted by Columbia University and UNDP, November 17, 2023 - Replay the session on 
    • The 2022 Global Gender Summit of the Multilateral Development Banks Working Group on Gender, May 17, 2022 -
    • The Power to Transform: Gender Equality in Asia and the Pacific - ADB Asia and the Pacific Virtual Gender Forum, November 22-25, 2021 -  by Caren Grown, GTP Senior Technical Advisor on Gender Equality and Tax Reform, at the good practice panel discussion on new frontiers for gender equality
    • | The Platform for Collaboration on Tax, June 15, 2021

    Related Links and Resources from across the World Bank:

    Female entrepreneurship and tax reform:

    • (Brief)
    • (Policy Research Working Paper)
    • (Brief)