Working Paper

ICTD Working Paper 195

The Price of Simplicity: Skewed and Regressive Taxation in Accra’s Informal Sector

Published on 13 June 2024

International and domestic policymakers have long assumed that informal economies represent an ‘untapped goldmine’ for government coffers. While recent research has highlighted that many informal businesses do pay a range of formal and informal taxes, there has, to date, been little systematic account of their tax burdens.

Using a novel dataset of 2,700 informal enterprises in the Accra metropolitan area, we explore the nature and impact of taxation in the informal sector. We find that the majority of informal sector operators pay a range of taxes and fees, which together amount to a significant burden, especially for low earners. These payments are skewed and regressive. Two additional findings emerge in relation to the structure of these taxes. First, the incidence and burden of tax payments is strongly correlated with visibility to the state. Second, taxes and fees are highly regressive, with lower-earning operators paying significantly more in relation to their earnings. These findings have important implications for efforts to tax informal businesses in low- and middle- income countries. The regressivity of efforts to tax the informal sector is often framed as a price worth paying for simplicity. Our study provides both an estimation of this ‘price’, and an underlying argument for collecting this kind of data on taxation of informal enterprises in order to assess real policy impacts.

Cite this publication

Anyidoho, N.A.; Gallien, M.; Rogan, M. and van den Boogaard, V. (2024) The Price of Simplicity: Skewed and Regressive Taxation in Accra’s Informal Sector, ICTD Working Paper 195 Brighton: Institute of Development Studies, DOI: 10.19088/ICTD.2024.044

Authors

Associate Professor and Director, Centre for Social Policy Studies, University of Ghana

Max Gallien

Research Fellow

Michael Rogan

Associate Professor, Rhodes University

Vanessa van den Boogaard

ICTD Research Fellow

Publication details

doi
10.19088/ICTD.2024.044
isbn
978-1-80470-206-2

Share

About this publication

Region
Ghana

Related content

Publication

What Impact Do Tax Agents Have on Taxpayers’ Compliance in Uganda? Evidence from Tax Administrative Data

ICTD Working Paper 221

14 May 2025

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.