Expanding budget space to improve health outcomes in low- and middle-income countries: what role for tax expenditures?
Abrams M E Tagem, Yann Tapsoba, Hélène Barroy

TL;DR
This paper shows that reducing wasteful tax breaks can free up funds for health, improving child and maternal survival in low-income countries.
Contribution
The study introduces the concept of 'health costs' of tax expenditures and demonstrates their impact on mortality outcomes.
Findings
Higher tax expenditures correlate with increased under-five and maternal mortality in low-income countries.
Strengthening public financial management reduces the negative health impacts of tax expenditures.
Rationalizing tax expenditures can expand fiscal space for health investments.
Abstract
Recent evidence indicates that budget space for health can be improved through increasing government revenues, expanding the budget’s health share, and improving expenditure efficiency through enhancing public financial management (PFM), with government revenue mobilization being the most substantial. Government revenue mobilization can be achieved by broadening the tax base, a key component of which is the rationalization of tax expenditures. Tax expenditures are preferential tax treatments, relative to a baseline tax regime, intended to achieve specific objectives by providing financial support to specific beneficiaries. They may, however, result in huge revenue losses, which could be otherwise invested in priority sectors, including health. In addition, tax expenditures ultimately exacerbate inequality, while also creating complexities that foster tax avoidance and evasion, all of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGlobal Health Care Issues · Healthcare Systems and Reforms
