Journal Article

Do Tax Policies Discriminate Against Female Traders? A Gender Framework to Study Informal Marketplaces in Nigeria

Published on 1 August 2022

Scholars have long debated formalizing the informal sector through taxation, but how do these processes affect gender inequalities? Our study in Nigerian markets contributes a gender framework to the equitable taxation literature on formalization.

The study draws on a survey of 451 traders in 12 markets, key informant interviews, and ethnographic research in four markets of two states. We find that in at least two situations taxation policies discriminated against women implicitly: (1) male tax collectors had higher incidences of harassment on all traders and (2) taxing traders with flat taxes penalized women, as they earned less than men but were taxed the same.

Cite this publication

Akpan, I. and Cascant-Sempere, M.J. (2022) 'Do Tax Policies Discriminate Against Female Traders? A Gender Framework to Study Informal Marketplaces in Nigeria', Poverty & Public Policy, 2022;1–20, DOI: 10.1002/pop4.349

Publication details

published by
Wiley Periodicals LLC
doi
10.1002/pop4.349
language
English

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About this publication

Region
Nigeria
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