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Year 2020, Volume: 12 Issue: 1, 46 - 49, 31.12.2020
https://doi.org/10.17261/Pressacademia.2020.1346

Abstract

References

  • Amusa K., N. Monkam & N. Viegi (2020). Can foreign aid enhance domestic resource mobilization in Nigeria? Journal of Contemporary African Studies, 38: 294-309.
  • Benedek, D., E. Crivelli, S. Gupta and P. Muthoora (2012). Foreign aid and revenue: Still a crowding out effect? Public Finance Analysis, 70: 67-96.
  • Boukbech, R., A. Bousselhamia, and E. Elhadj (2018). Determinants of tax revenues: Evidence from a sample of Lower Middle Income countries. Applied Economics and Finance, 6: 11-20.
  • Carter, P. (2013). Does foreign aid displace domestic taxation? Journal of Globalization and Development 4: pp. 1–47.
  • Clist, P. and O. Morrissey (2011). Aid and tax revenue: Signs of a positive effect since the 1980s. Journal of International Development 23: 165-80.
  • Fenochietto, R. and C. Pessino (2016). Understanding countries’ tax effort. IMF Working Paper No. 13/42.
  • Gupta, A. (2007). Determinants of tax revenue efforts in developing countries. IMF Working Paper No. 07/184.
  • Heller, P. (1975). A model of public fiscal Behavior in developing countries: Aid, investment and taxation. American Economic Review, June: 429-445.
  • McGillivray, M and O. Morrissey (2001). New of evidence of the fiscal effects of aid, CREDIT Research Paper, No. 01/13, Centre for Research in Economic Development and International Trade, University of Nottingham, Nottingham.
  • Morrissey, O. (2015). Fiscal composition and aid effectiveness: A political economy model. World Development, 69: 106–115.
  • Moss, T., G. Pettersson and N. van de Walle (2008). An aid-institutions paradox? A review essay on aid ependency and Stsate building in Sub-Saharan Africa, in Reinventing Aid, ed., W. Easterly, Cambridge MA: The MIT Press.
  • Oz-Yalaman, G. (2019). Financial inclusion and tax revenue. Central Bank Review, 19: 107-113.
  • Remmer, K. (2004). Does foreign aid promote the expansion of government? American Journal of Political Science 48: 77-92

PUBLIC FINANCE IN JORDAN: A LESSON FROM COVID-19

Year 2020, Volume: 12 Issue: 1, 46 - 49, 31.12.2020
https://doi.org/10.17261/Pressacademia.2020.1346

Abstract

Purpose - COVID-19 is a human and economic tragedy. It has become obvious that the virus pressed hard public finances all over the world. However, countries with relatively limited fiscal space face will experience more pressure. Within this context, this paper has two objectives. First, to outline the status of public finance in Jordan, and in particular, the weight that foreign grants carry in public revenues. Second, to examine the impact of foreign grants on the tax effort in Jordan. In other words, the objective is to examine whether or not public finance in Jordan suffers from the “aid curse”.
Methodology - The period 1984 – 2019 forms the data for the statistical analysis. In addition, and to examine the impact of foreign aid on tax effort, the paper uses time series analysis techniques including stationarity tests, optimal lag length criteria, co-integration, long-run relationship, and variance decomposition analysis.
Findings - Based on the empirical results, Jordan does suffer from the curse of aid. Grants do have a negative and significant impact of tax revenues (tax effort).
Conclusion - Relevant stakeholders in Jordan should use COVID-19 as a “trigger” point for change in the country’s fiscal mobilization process. This is the only way to reduce the growing public debt, and reduce the country’s reliance on foreign grants.

References

  • Amusa K., N. Monkam & N. Viegi (2020). Can foreign aid enhance domestic resource mobilization in Nigeria? Journal of Contemporary African Studies, 38: 294-309.
  • Benedek, D., E. Crivelli, S. Gupta and P. Muthoora (2012). Foreign aid and revenue: Still a crowding out effect? Public Finance Analysis, 70: 67-96.
  • Boukbech, R., A. Bousselhamia, and E. Elhadj (2018). Determinants of tax revenues: Evidence from a sample of Lower Middle Income countries. Applied Economics and Finance, 6: 11-20.
  • Carter, P. (2013). Does foreign aid displace domestic taxation? Journal of Globalization and Development 4: pp. 1–47.
  • Clist, P. and O. Morrissey (2011). Aid and tax revenue: Signs of a positive effect since the 1980s. Journal of International Development 23: 165-80.
  • Fenochietto, R. and C. Pessino (2016). Understanding countries’ tax effort. IMF Working Paper No. 13/42.
  • Gupta, A. (2007). Determinants of tax revenue efforts in developing countries. IMF Working Paper No. 07/184.
  • Heller, P. (1975). A model of public fiscal Behavior in developing countries: Aid, investment and taxation. American Economic Review, June: 429-445.
  • McGillivray, M and O. Morrissey (2001). New of evidence of the fiscal effects of aid, CREDIT Research Paper, No. 01/13, Centre for Research in Economic Development and International Trade, University of Nottingham, Nottingham.
  • Morrissey, O. (2015). Fiscal composition and aid effectiveness: A political economy model. World Development, 69: 106–115.
  • Moss, T., G. Pettersson and N. van de Walle (2008). An aid-institutions paradox? A review essay on aid ependency and Stsate building in Sub-Saharan Africa, in Reinventing Aid, ed., W. Easterly, Cambridge MA: The MIT Press.
  • Oz-Yalaman, G. (2019). Financial inclusion and tax revenue. Central Bank Review, 19: 107-113.
  • Remmer, K. (2004). Does foreign aid promote the expansion of government? American Journal of Political Science 48: 77-92
There are 13 citations in total.

Details

Primary Language English
Subjects Finance, Business Administration
Journal Section Articles
Authors

Muhanned Obeidat This is me 0000-0002-8988-1291

Ahmad Tarawneh This is me 0000-0002-5833-1887

Mohammad Khataybeh This is me 0000-0003-3599-903X

Ghassan Omet This is me

Publication Date December 31, 2020
Published in Issue Year 2020 Volume: 12 Issue: 1

Cite

APA Obeidat, M., Tarawneh, A., Khataybeh, M., Omet, G. (2020). PUBLIC FINANCE IN JORDAN: A LESSON FROM COVID-19. PressAcademia Procedia, 12(1), 46-49. https://doi.org/10.17261/Pressacademia.2020.1346
AMA Obeidat M, Tarawneh A, Khataybeh M, Omet G. PUBLIC FINANCE IN JORDAN: A LESSON FROM COVID-19. PAP. December 2020;12(1):46-49. doi:10.17261/Pressacademia.2020.1346
Chicago Obeidat, Muhanned, Ahmad Tarawneh, Mohammad Khataybeh, and Ghassan Omet. “PUBLIC FINANCE IN JORDAN: A LESSON FROM COVID-19”. PressAcademia Procedia 12, no. 1 (December 2020): 46-49. https://doi.org/10.17261/Pressacademia.2020.1346.
EndNote Obeidat M, Tarawneh A, Khataybeh M, Omet G (December 1, 2020) PUBLIC FINANCE IN JORDAN: A LESSON FROM COVID-19. PressAcademia Procedia 12 1 46–49.
IEEE M. Obeidat, A. Tarawneh, M. Khataybeh, and G. Omet, “PUBLIC FINANCE IN JORDAN: A LESSON FROM COVID-19”, PAP, vol. 12, no. 1, pp. 46–49, 2020, doi: 10.17261/Pressacademia.2020.1346.
ISNAD Obeidat, Muhanned et al. “PUBLIC FINANCE IN JORDAN: A LESSON FROM COVID-19”. PressAcademia Procedia 12/1 (December 2020), 46-49. https://doi.org/10.17261/Pressacademia.2020.1346.
JAMA Obeidat M, Tarawneh A, Khataybeh M, Omet G. PUBLIC FINANCE IN JORDAN: A LESSON FROM COVID-19. PAP. 2020;12:46–49.
MLA Obeidat, Muhanned et al. “PUBLIC FINANCE IN JORDAN: A LESSON FROM COVID-19”. PressAcademia Procedia, vol. 12, no. 1, 2020, pp. 46-49, doi:10.17261/Pressacademia.2020.1346.
Vancouver Obeidat M, Tarawneh A, Khataybeh M, Omet G. PUBLIC FINANCE IN JORDAN: A LESSON FROM COVID-19. PAP. 2020;12(1):46-9.

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