Author: Anna Pluta
Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2015/2018 publication
Check the latest GEM report, written by Marija Krūmiņa and Anders Paalzow. It covers the results of three sequential years of studies, from 2015 to 2017. GEM is a major international research project aimed at describing and analysing the entrepreneurial process across a wide range of countries. It is our belief that the Latvian GEM will not only contribute to an understanding of the factors influencing entrepreneurship in Latvia but that it will also contribute to an informed debate on Latvian entrepreneurship and the opportunities and challenges it is facing.
Click here to read about the GEM and download the previous GEM reports.
Estimating budget and social costs of psychoactive substance abuse in Latvia (2018)
Project duration: 2018
Research team: Anna Pluta and Anna Zasova
Funded by Latvian Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (latv. – Slimību Profilakses un Kontroles Centrs)
The aim of this report is to provide an estimate of the consolidated general budget and external or non-budget costs of illegal drug use in Latvia for 2017. This is the second time such an estimation is done for Latvia. The first estimation was done in 2010 and covered the costs of drug abuse in 2008 (BICEPS, 2010).
The estimated costs consist of three main components: consolidated general budget costs, foregone budget revenues and non-budget costs. Section 4 of the report deals with consolidated general budget costs. As the initial source for general government budget expenditures on drug-related measures we use labelled expenditures, i.e. expenditures allocated by central and local government to drug-related initiatives, which are reflected in their budgets. In order to calculate labelled expenditures, first we identify the institutions involved in combating drug abuse and illicit trafficking, and then use the budget reports of these institutions or the information received on request on these institutions’ actual expenditure on combating drug abuse and illicit trafficking.
In addition, we estimate non-labelled drug-related expenditures, which are included in the programs with broader objectives and do not appear in the state and local government budgets as separate expenditure items. These expenditures can be identified as related expenditure, such as expenditures encountered by the police, the prosecutor’s office and the courts while investigating crimes related to illegal drug abuse, prisons’ expenditures on supporting people incarcerated for drug-related crimes, probation expenditures on work with people accused of drug-related crimes, expenditures on inpatient and outpatient treatment of drug dependency and associated diseases, expenditures on drug education in schools, and other types of costs.
Total drug-related budget costs in 2017 are estimated to be at least EUR 32.6 mln, or 0.33% of consolidated general budget expenditures. By COFOG classification, the expenditures were mainly concentrated in the fields of public order and safety (70.1%) and health (27.5%). The expenditures on public order and safety mainly consisted of the costs of the State Revenue Service Customs Police Department related to combating illicit drug trafficking, costs related to investigation of drug-related crimes encountered by the police, and costs of supporting persons incarcerated for drug-related crimes encountered by the Latvian Prison Administration. Expenditures on health mainly consisted of expenditures on compensated medicines for the treatment of diseases and infections caused by injecting drugs – HIV / AIDS and viral hepatitis B and C.
When classified by Reuter’s classification, expenditures on law enforcement (70.1%) represent the biggest group. Treatment expenditures accounted for approximately one fifth (21.1%) of total expenditures, but expenditures on prevention and harm reduction accounted for 5.0% and 4.1%, respectively.
Section 7 of the report deals with foregone budget revenues. This component of drug-related costs is generated by problem drug users’ spending on illegal drugs. If this money were spent on legal goods and services, the government could raise extra tax revenues. According to our estimations, drug-related foregone budget revenues amounted to around EUR 2.6 – 3.9 mln. Thus the net budget effect (expenditures plus foregone revenues) of illegal drug use is estimated at EUR 35.2 – 36.4 mln., or 0.13% of GDP.
Finally, Section 8 of the report is devoted to estimation of external or non-budget costs of drug abuse. These costs are due to the fact that problem drug users are more frequently non-employed, they tend to have higher mortality and morbidity risks, they have lower productivity at work and higher absenteeism. Total non-budget costs are estimated at EUR 43.1 – 60.6 mln., or 0.16-0.22% of GDP. The main source of non-budget costs was a low employment rate among the problem drug users.
Total costs of illegal drug use in 2017 amounted to EUR 78.3 – 97.0 mln., or 0.29 – 0.36% of GDP.
Remigration and brain gain in Latvia (2018 – 2022)
Fundamental and Applied Research Project “Remigration and brain gain in Latvia (BRAIN)”
Duration: September 2018 – September 2022.
Project is funded by the Latvian Science Council.
Core team: Kata Fredheim, Marija Krumina, Anders Paalzow, Zane Varpina.
Affiliated researchers: Anna Elizabete Grike, Kalev Aasmäe, Rūta Dapkūnaitė, Aivars Timofejevs, Anna Pluta, Nellija Titova.
The research team at BICEPS and SSE Riga worked on a four-year project on the ‘brain drain – brain gain’ process for the Baltics, in particular Latvia, by studying human capital gain and loss resulting from mobility.
Latvia has exhibited the fastest depopulation rate in the world; since 2000, the Latvian population has shrunk by 18% to around 1.9 million people due to a combination of low birth rates and emigration. With an estimated 259 000 people who emigrated from 2000-2013 and have not returned, it should be no surprise that remigration has emerged as a topic of national interest – in particular in the aftermath of the financial crisis. Lithuania is experiencing similar trends, while Estonia only recently reversed the trend to positive net migration.
The increased focus on remigration is not unique to the Baltics. After Central and Eastern European countries’ accession to the EU and the financial crisis that motivated people to leave their countries for work or educational reasons, their return has been identified as a way to reverse brain drain and turn migration into a source of brain gain.
When migrants return, the skills, experiences and networks they bring back constitute net human capital gains, often described as brain gain. The assets that return migrants carry include work and study experience in a different environment, languages, innovations, advanced technology skills, foreign contacts, entrepreneurial aspirations, and financial resources to be invested in business ventures.
Aim of the research
This project aims to estimate the migration ‘brain drain – brain gain’ process for Latvia by studying mobility of Latvian nationals from two perspectives. BEFORE: a forward-looking approach with respect to migration, a study of the youth population after secondary education. The ‘before’ approach seeks answer to question “What are secondary school leavers’ aspirations and plans for work and studies abroad?” The study is based on quantitative survey and qualitative interviews of school graduates. AFTER: returnees are studied to find out “What skills and competencies do return migrants bring back to Latvia from their work or studies abroad?”, “What is the effect of foreign experience on entrepreneurial activity and success?” A pan-Baltic survey and in-depth interviews are used to explore business owners and managers perceptions of return migrants. Annual survey of the Latvian adult population combined with in-depth interviews is used to analyse and compare the activity level, ambitions and attitudes towards entrepreneurship and intrapreneurship between return migrants and the ones stayed in Latvia.
Main results of the project
The project’s main outputs are seven research papers and broad data collected on different aspects of migration. Data includes: the unique School graduate survey data (2200+400 respondents); extended Global Entrepreneurship Monitor survey data capturing return migrants and their involvement in entrepreneurship (8000 respondents); extended SSE Riga annual survey data on business owners and managers in the Baltics, providing their attitudes towards return migrants (3000 respondents); the in-depths interviews (162) with graduates return migrants and business owners in three Baltic countries. International workshops, 14 conference presentations, mini-lectures, a podcast, expert interviews, a series of professional short videos with the main project results, and the final conference with panel discussions on remigration, entrepreneurship, experience, and education organized in June, 2022, were among other outcomes of the project.
Research papers
- Mobility intentions of Latvian high-schools graduates amid Covid-19 pandemic and beyond, by Zane Varpina and Kata Fredheim.
- Implications of the Covid-19 pandemic on high school graduates plans and education path, by Zane Varpina, Kata Fredheim and Marija Krumina.
- The Covid-19 pandemic’s impact on migrants’ decision to return home to Latvia, by Zane Varpina and Kata Fredheim.
- Who is more eager to leave? Differences in emigration intentions among Latvian and Russian speaking school graduates in Latvia, by Zane Varpina, Kata Fredheim and Marija Krumina.
- What a manager wants: how return migrants’ experiences are valued by managers in the Baltics, by Zane Varpina and Kata Fredheim.
- Back for business: the link between foreign experience and entrepreneurial activity in Latvia, by Zane Varpina, Marija Krumina, Kata Fredheim and Anders Paalzow.
- Ukrainian asylum seekers in Latvia: the circumstances of destination choice, by Zane Varpina and Kata Fredheim.
Remigration and brain gain – why it matters and what we found
Why do migrants return? How do employers think about the skills they bring back? Are they more likely to start an enterprise? We also looked into the future: what are high school graduates’ plans about leaving? These are some of the questions we sought insight about and explore in this four-part video series.
Returning on a jet plane: Why do Baltic migrants return?
Why do migrants in the Baltics choose to return home? Is it for money, lifestyle, or was it planned all along? We explore return migrants’ narratives of return to find out. We also discuss how those who returned during the Covid-19 pandemic made the decision to come back.
Should I stay or should I go? Why and where do Latvian students want to migrate?
As many as 60% of Latvian students consider migration. We discuss why they want to move and find that economic reasons are not the main driving force behind youth migration! Where do they want to go, and why are some of the main questions the research team explores in this research. This matters because migration intentions are a powerful predictor of future migration.
Let’s get started: Entrepreneurship among returnees.
Returnees are more likely to become entrepreneurs than those who did not migrate. Why is that? Is it about funding, ideas, skills or an appetite for risk? The research team discusses the reasons and the benefits:
Conference: Remigration and Brain Gain in the Baltics
Read more about the conference. The video record of the conference is available here.
The Monograph “Competitiveness of Latvian Enterprises in External Markets”
The monograph “Competitiveness of Latvian Enterprises in External Markets” is a joint work of BICEPS researchers and SSE Riga graduates completed within the State Research Programme SUSTINNO project in the period 2014-2018.
The main objective of the monograph is to better understand the factors that promote exporting of the Latvian enterprises, as well as barriers that firms may face when entering export markets. The monograph consists of two parts. The first part examines similarities and differences between exporters and non-exporters and evaluates factors that affect firms’ propensity to export, with a particular focus on the role of EU fund investments and tax evasion. The second part provides a more general analysis of determinants of efficiency and competitiveness of the Latvian enterprises.
Capital Controls and Electoral Cycles
New SSE Riga/BICEPS research paper by Nicolas Gavoille (SSE Riga) and Katharina Hofer (Swiss Institute for Empirical Research, University of St.Gallen).
Abstract. This paper studies the relation between the evolution of capital controls and electoral cycles. We exploit a dataset containing detailed information on the level of restrictions on capital flows for 98 countries on an annual base from 1995 to 2015, constructed by Fernandez et al. (2016). First, we find that restrictions are more likely to increase during an election year. Elections prove to be more closely related to changes in capital controls than any economic variable. Second, these changes are driven predominantly by restrictions on capital outflows and on relatively liquid asset categories. Third, changes tend to occur after elections rather than before. Finally, capital controls increase by more if the new government is more leftist or less liberal than its predecessor, and more electoral uncertainty is related to higher restrictions on capital flows. Overall, these results suggests that theories examining the cyclical properties of capital controls should also consider electoral cycles.
Keywords: Capital controls, Election, Electoral cycles
JEL: D72, J45, C14
Alf Vanags memorial lecture 2018
Watch Alf Vanags memorial lecture “Self-interest Against Climate Change” by John Broome (Oxford University) that took place on May 17 at 13:00 in Soros Amphitheatre, SSE Riga. Introduction by Charles Okeahalam (Co-founder AGH Group).
Projects funded by the Latvian Council of Science
CURRENT PROJECTS
Fundamental and Applied Research Project “A Thirty-Year Study of Corporate Ownership Evolution in Latvia” (2025-2027)
Research team: Anete Pajuste, Valerija Kozlova, Maija Dobele, Marija Krūmiņa.
Project information: read more about the project.
Fundamental and Applied Research Project “Study of health literacy in Latvia: levels, burden and interventions” (2025-2027)
Research team: Agnes Lubloy, Zane Vārpiņa, Dominik Gerber, Inese Stars, Marija Krūmiņa.
Project information: read more about the project.
Fundamental and Applied Research Project “Labour Market Response to Shocks: Strategies for Adaptability and Resilience (StAR)” (2025-2027)
Research team: Ija Trapezņikova, Mihails Hazans, Māris Goldmanis, Marija Krūmiņa, Anna Pļuta.
Project information: read more about the project.
COMPLETED PROJECTS
State Research Programme “Reducing the Shadow Economy to Ensure Sustainable Development of the Latvian State”, project “Researching the Shadow Economy in Latvia (RE:SHADE)” (2020-2022)
Research team: Arnis Sauka, Tālis Putniņš, Anna Zasova, Nicolas Gavoille, Dmitrijs Kravcenko, Andris Saulitis, Juris Stinka, Friederik Schneider, Colin Williams.
Project information: read more about the project.
Fundamental and Applied Research Project “Remigration and brain gain in Latvia (BRAIN)” (2018 – 2022)
Duration: September 2018 – September 2022.
Core team: Kata Fredheim, Marija Krumina, Anders Paalzow, Zane Varpina.
Affiliated researchers: Anna Elizabete Grike, Kalev Aasmäe, Rūta Dapkūnaitė, Aivars Timofejevs, Anna Pluta, Nellija Titova.
Project information: read more about the project.
InTEL: Institutions and Tax Enforcement in Latvia (2018-2021)
Research team: Nicolas Gavoille, Vitalijs Jascisens, Arnis Sauka, Anna Zasova, Anna Pluta, Marija Krumina.
Project information: read more about the project.
Distributional effects of recent benefit and tax reforms in Latvia
New SSE Riga/BICEPS occasional paper by Anna Pluta (BICEPS) and Anna Zasova (BICEPS).
Abstract. In this note, we evaluate the distributional effects of the minimum income reform and the tax reform, which are implemented in Latvia starting 2018. Our analysis is focused on estimating the expected changes in income inequality and poverty rates, which the reforms will induce. We use tax-benefit microsimulation model EUROMOD andanationally representative data on income EU-SILC. Our results suggest that even though both the minimum income reform and the tax reform help achieving some reduction in income inequality and poverty, none of the reforms will be very effective in resolving the problem of weak work incentives and high tax wedge for low income earners.
Latvia Stumbling Towards Progressive Income Taxation: Episode II
New SSE Riga/BICEPS occasional paper by Anna Pluta (BICEPS) and Anna Zasova (BICEPS).
Abstract. In August 2017, the Latvian parliament adopted a major tax reform package that will come into force in January 2018. This reform was a long-awaited step from the Latvian authorities to make the personal income tax more progressive. Some of the elements of the adopted reform, e.g. the changes in the basic tax allowance are estimated to help reducing the tax wedge on low wages and help addressing the problem of high income inequality. At the same time, the way the newly introduced progressive tax rate is designed will effectively lead to a reduction in the tax burden on labor and will hardly introduce any progressivity to the system.
Latvia Stumbling Towards Progressive Income Taxation: Episode II
In August 2017, the Latvian parliament adopted a major tax reform package that will come into force in January 2018. This reform was a long-awaited step from the Latvian authorities to make the personal income tax more progressive. Some of the elements of the adopted reform, e.g. the changes in the basic tax allowance are estimated to help reducing the tax wedge on low wages and help addressing the problem of high income inequality. At the same time, the way the newly introduced progressive tax rate is designed will effectively lead to a reduction in the tax burden on labor and will hardly introduce any progressivity to the system.
In recent years, reducing income inequality has become one of the top priorities of the Latvian government. Income inequality in Latvia is higher than in most other EU and OECD countries, and the need to address this issue has been repeatedly emphasized by the Latvian officials, the European Commission, the World Bank and OECD.
The main reason for high income-inequality is a low degree of income redistribution ensured by the tax-benefit system. The personal income tax (PIT) has been flat since the mid-nineties. While the non-taxable income allowance introduces some progressivity to the system, the Latvian tax system is characterized by a very high tax burden on low wages, compared to other EU and OECD countries.
Since the beginning of 2017, the government has worked on an extensive tax reform package that was passed in the parliament in August and will become effective as of January 2018.
Two years ago, we wrote about the tax reform of 2016. In this brief, we estimate the effect of the 2018 reform on the tax burden on labour and income inequality. We will only consider changes in direct taxes on personal income – the changes in enterprise income tax and excise tax are outside the scope of our analysis. Parts of our estimations are done using the tax-benefit microsimulation model EUROMOD (for more details about the EUROMOD modelling approach, see Sutherland and Figari, 2013) and EU-SILC 2015 data.
Tax reform 2018
We focus our analysis on four elements of the reform that are expected to affect income inequality and that are described below. In our simulations, however, we take into account all changes in the PIT rules.
First, the flat PIT rate of 23% will be replaced by a progressive rate with three brackets: 20% (applied to annual income not exceeding 20,000 EUR), 23% (for annual income above 20,000 EUR and below 55,000 EUR) and 31.4% (applied to income exceeding 55,000 EUR per year).
Second, the maximum possible PIT allowance will be increased and the structure of the PIT allowance will be made more progressive. Latvia has a differentiated allowance since 2016, which means that individuals with lower incomes are eligible for a higher tax allowance. Figure 1 shows the changes in the non-taxable allowance that will be introduced by the reform. Another important change is that the differentiated allowance will be applied to the taxable income in the course of the year. The current system foresees that, during a calendar year, all wages are taxed applying the lowest possible allowance (60 EUR per month in 2017), but workers eligible for a higher allowance have to claim the overpaid tax in the beginning of the next year.
Figure 1. Basic PIT allowance before (2017) and after (2018-2020) the reform, EUR
Source: compiled by the authors.
Third, the rate of social insurance contributions will be increased by 1 percentage point. Social insurance contributions are capped and the cap will be increased from 48,600 EUR per year to 55,000 EUR per year, i.e. to the same income threshold that divides the top PIT bracket.
Finally, the reform will modify the solidarity tax – a tax, which was introduced in Latvia in 2016 and which is paid by top income earners. When this tax was initially introduced, one of its objectives was to eliminate the regressivity from the tax system caused by the cap on social insurance contributions. Hence, the rate of the solidarity tax was set at the same level as the rate of social insurance contributions and was effectively replacing social insurance contributions above the cap. The reform foresees that part of the revenues from the solidarity tax (10.5 percentage points) will be used to finance the top PIT rate. This element of the reform implies that after January 2018 those falling into the top PIT bracket will, in fact, not face a higher PIT rate than those falling into the second income bracket – the introduction of the top rate will be offset by the restructuring of the solidarity tax.
Results
There are four main findings. First, the reform will reduce the tax wedge on labor income, whereas the tax wedge on low wages will remain high by international standards. Second, most of the PIT taxable income earners (93.5%) will fall into the bottom income bracket. Hence the reform will effectively reduce the tax burden, while the effect on progressivity is very limited. Third, the (small) increase in tax progressivity is ensured mainly by changes in the tax allowance, while the effect of changes in the tax rate on progressivity is negligible: Even those few PIT payers that fall into the top tax bracket will not experience any increase in the tax burden due to a compensating change in the solidarity tax. Finally, it is mainly the households in the middle of the income distribution that will gain from the reform.
Effect on tax wedge
We start with a simple comparison of the average labor tax wedge in Latvia and other OECD countries for different wage levels before and after the reform. The tax wedge measures the share of total labor costs that is taxed away in the form of taxes or social contributions payable on employees’ income.
Table 1. Average tax wedge for single wage earners without dependents in Latvia and other OECD countries, before and after the reform
|
67% of average worker’s wage |
100% of average worker’s wage |
167% of average worker’s wage |
|
| OECD average in 2016, % (a) | 32.3 | 36.0 | 40.4 |
| Latvia 2016, % (a) | 41.8 | 42.6 | 43.3 |
| Latvia’s rank in 2016* (a) | 6 | 11 | 16 |
| Latvia 2018, % (b) | 39.4 | 42.3 | 42.6 |
| Latvia 2019, % (b) | 39.1 | 42.1 | 42.6 |
| Latvia 2020, %(b) | 39.0 | 41.9 | 42.8 |
Source: (a) OECD and (b) authors’ calculations. Note: * Ranking across 35 OECD countries. Higher ranking implies higher tax wedge relative to other countries.
Table 1 shows that the tax wedge on low wages (67% of an average worker’s wage) in Latvia is pretty high. In 2016, it was the 6th highest across OECD countries, while the tax wedge on high incomes (167% of the wage) is much closer to the OECD average.
While the reform will slightly reduce the tax wedge for low wage earners (from 41.8% to 39.0% in 2020), it will still remain high by OECD standards. Despite an increase in PIT rate for high-income earners, the reform will also lower the tax wedge for those who earn 167% of the average wage. Why? The explanation comes from the income thresholds for the tax brackets. The income of those earning 167% of the average wage is estimated to fully fall into the first tax bracket in 2018–2019 and only slightly exceed the income bracket for the second PIT rate by 2020. This means that most of the incomes of people earning 167% of the average wage will be taxed at the rate of 20%, which is lower than the current flat rate of 23%. Moreover, in 2020, only a small share of their income will be taxed at 23% – the same rate that these individuals would have had faced in the absence of the reform. Hence, we observe a reduction in the tax wedge for high-income earners.
Generally, only a very small share of taxpayers will fall into the middle and the top income brackets. According to our estimations, as many as 93.5% of all PIT taxable income earners will fall into the lowest income bracket, and only about 6.5% will fall into the second income bracket and about 0.5% will face the top PIT rate.
Apart from the progressive PIT schedule, the reform envisages important changes in the solidarity tax. As explained above, part of the revenues from the solidarity tax will be used to finance the top PIT rate. Therefore, even those (very few) taxpayers whose income will exceed the threshold for the top PIT rate, will not experience any increase in the tax burden because of the compensating change in the solidarity tax. Therefore, the reform will effectively reduce the tax burden on labour with very little effect on progressivity.
While lowering the tax burden is generally welcome, the motivation for applying the top rate to such a small group of taxpayers is not clear. For example, in their recent in-depth analysis of the Latvian tax system, the World Bank (World Bank, 2016) came up with a tax reform proposal that envisaged a considerably lower threshold for the top PIT rate, which, according to our estimations, would cover about 12% of the taxpayers. Given the limited budget resources and an especially high tax wedge on low wages, a more targeted reduction in the tax burden would be preferable. Similar concerns about insufficient reduction in the tax burden on low-income earners are expressed in the latest OECD economic survey of Latvia (OECD, 2017).
Effect on income distribution
Below we present the results from the tax-benefit microsimulation model EUROMOD. Figure 2 shows the simulated change in equivalized disposable income by income deciles compared to the baseline “no-reform” scenario in 2018-2020.
Figure 2. Change in equivalized disposable income by income deciles caused by the reform compared to “no-reform” scenario, %
Source: authors’ calculations using EUROMOD-LV model
The first thing to note is that these are mainly households in the middle of the income distribution who will gain from the reform – their income will increase due to both the increase in non-taxable allowance and the introduction of the progressive rate.
The gain in the bottom of the income distribution is smaller for several reasons. First, the proportion of non-employed individuals (unemployed and non-active) is larger in the bottom deciles. Second, individuals with low wages are less likely to gain from the reduction in the tax rate and the increase in the basic allowance, since they might already have most of their income untaxed due to the currently effective basic allowance. The same applies to pensioners who have a higher basic allowance than the employed individuals and who are mainly concentrated in the bottom of income distribution.
Our results suggest that the wealthiest households will also see their incomes grow as a result of the reform (by about 1% in 10th decile). The growth is ensured by the fact that annual income below 20,000 EUR will be taxed at a reduced rate of 20%, and, taking into account that even in the top decile only about half of the individuals get income from employment that exceeds 20,000 EUR per year, the gain from the tax reduction is considerable even in the top decile. A reduction in the tax allowance for high-income earners will have a negative effect on wealthy individuals’ income, but this will be more than compensated by the above positive effect of the change in the tax rate. Hence, the net effect on the incomes in the top deciles is estimated to be positive.
Finally, Table 2 summarizes the effect of the reform on the income distribution, measured by the Gini coefficient on equivalized disposable income. On the whole, the reform is estimated to slightly reduce income inequality – in 2020, the Gini coefficient is expected to be 0.6 points lower than it would have been in the absence of the reform. This reduction is mainly driven by the changes in the non-taxable allowance, while the three PIT rates are estimated to have an increasing impact on income inequality.
Table 2. Gini coefficient on equivalized disposable income in the reform and “no-reform” scenario
| 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | |
| “No-reform” scenario | 35.2 | 35.4 | 35.7 |
| Reform scenario | 35.0 | 35.0 | 35.1 |
Source: authors’ calculations using EUROMOD-LV model
Conclusion
The 2018 tax reform was a long-awaited step from the Latvian authorities on the way to a more progressive tax system. The planned changes in the basic tax allowance are estimated to help reducing the tax wedge on low wages and help addressing the problem of high income-inequality.
At the same time, the second major aspect of the reform, the introduction of a progressive PIT rate, raises more questions than answers. The progressive rate, the way it is designed, will effectively lead to an across-the-board reduction of the tax burden on labor and will hardly help to reach the proclaimed objective of taxing incomes progressively. Given the limited budgetary resources and given that taxes on low wages will remain high compared to other countries even after the reform, a more targeted reduction of the taxes on low-income earners would have been a more preferred option.
References
- OECD, 2017. “OECD Economic Surveys: Latvia 2017”, OECD Publishing, Paris. http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/eco_surveys-lva-2017-en
- Sutherland, H. and Figari, F., 2013. “EUROMOD: the European Union tax-benefit microsimulation model”, International Journal of Microsimulation, 1(6), 4-26.
- World Bank, 2016. “Latvia Tax Review”, available at http://fm.gov.lv/files/nodoklupolitika/Latvia%20Tax%20Review%20Draft%20231216%20D.pdf
