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A Political Economy Analysis of Domestic Resource Mobilization in Uganda

Publikation: Working paper/Preprint Working paperForskningpeer review

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A Political Economy Analysis of Domestic Resource Mobilization in Uganda. / Kjær, Anne Mette; Ulriksen, Marianne Sandvad.
2017-8. udg. Geneva: UNRISD, 2017.

Publikation: Working paper/Preprint Working paperForskningpeer review

Harvard

Kjær, AM & Ulriksen, MS 2017 'A Political Economy Analysis of Domestic Resource Mobilization in Uganda' UNRISD Working Paper Series, 2017-8 udg, UNRISD, Geneva. <http://www.unrisd.org/kjaer-et-al>

APA

Kjær, A. M., & Ulriksen, M. S. (2017). A Political Economy Analysis of Domestic Resource Mobilization in Uganda. (2017-8 udg.) UNRISD. UNRISD Working Paper Series http://www.unrisd.org/kjaer-et-al

CBE

MLA

Kjær, Anne Mette og Marianne Sandvad Ulriksen A Political Economy Analysis of Domestic Resource Mobilization in Uganda. 2017-8 udg. Geneva: UNRISD. (UNRISD Working Paper Series). 2017., 35 s.

Vancouver

Author

Kjær, Anne Mette ; Ulriksen, Marianne Sandvad. / A Political Economy Analysis of Domestic Resource Mobilization in Uganda. 2017-8. udg. Geneva : UNRISD, 2017. (UNRISD Working Paper Series).

Bibtex

@techreport{d07175a9d3404f3fb3404e720e5efdbd,
title = "A Political Economy Analysis of Domestic Resource Mobilization in Uganda",
abstract = "This synthesis paper brings together the research findings from four papers prepared by the Uganda team as a part of the UNRISD Politics of Domestic Resource Mobilization for Social Development project, which addresses three broad themes: bargaining and contestation, key relations, and institution-building with regard to mobilizing resources for social development. In the paper we analyse how political economy factors affect revenue raising and social spending priorities in Uganda. We establish a theoretical framework based on the political settlement theory, within which we explore instances of revenue bargain, which we understand as political negotiations that shape revenue mobilization, the actual revenue composition, and policy priorities guiding revenue allocation. We focus on three instances of revenue bargains: legislative tax reform, institutional performance of the revenue agencies, and policy-making. The first two instances relate to the actual mobilization of resources, whereas the third example focuses on bargains over spending priorities within a given revenue base. We find that in Uganda, a low-income country with competing political factions, there are specific challenges to mobilizing resources for social development. The need to maintain political power has led to reduced tax intakes, as a result of abolishing taxes levied on rural voters and introducing tax exemptions for powerful supporters. On the spending side, social development concerns compete with other public policy areas as well as the pressure to allocate resources for political purposes",
author = "Kj{\ae}r, {Anne Mette} and Ulriksen, {Marianne Sandvad}",
year = "2017",
language = "English",
series = "UNRISD Working Paper Series",
publisher = "UNRISD",
edition = "2017-8",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "UNRISD",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - A Political Economy Analysis of Domestic Resource Mobilization in Uganda

AU - Kjær, Anne Mette

AU - Ulriksen, Marianne Sandvad

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - This synthesis paper brings together the research findings from four papers prepared by the Uganda team as a part of the UNRISD Politics of Domestic Resource Mobilization for Social Development project, which addresses three broad themes: bargaining and contestation, key relations, and institution-building with regard to mobilizing resources for social development. In the paper we analyse how political economy factors affect revenue raising and social spending priorities in Uganda. We establish a theoretical framework based on the political settlement theory, within which we explore instances of revenue bargain, which we understand as political negotiations that shape revenue mobilization, the actual revenue composition, and policy priorities guiding revenue allocation. We focus on three instances of revenue bargains: legislative tax reform, institutional performance of the revenue agencies, and policy-making. The first two instances relate to the actual mobilization of resources, whereas the third example focuses on bargains over spending priorities within a given revenue base. We find that in Uganda, a low-income country with competing political factions, there are specific challenges to mobilizing resources for social development. The need to maintain political power has led to reduced tax intakes, as a result of abolishing taxes levied on rural voters and introducing tax exemptions for powerful supporters. On the spending side, social development concerns compete with other public policy areas as well as the pressure to allocate resources for political purposes

AB - This synthesis paper brings together the research findings from four papers prepared by the Uganda team as a part of the UNRISD Politics of Domestic Resource Mobilization for Social Development project, which addresses three broad themes: bargaining and contestation, key relations, and institution-building with regard to mobilizing resources for social development. In the paper we analyse how political economy factors affect revenue raising and social spending priorities in Uganda. We establish a theoretical framework based on the political settlement theory, within which we explore instances of revenue bargain, which we understand as political negotiations that shape revenue mobilization, the actual revenue composition, and policy priorities guiding revenue allocation. We focus on three instances of revenue bargains: legislative tax reform, institutional performance of the revenue agencies, and policy-making. The first two instances relate to the actual mobilization of resources, whereas the third example focuses on bargains over spending priorities within a given revenue base. We find that in Uganda, a low-income country with competing political factions, there are specific challenges to mobilizing resources for social development. The need to maintain political power has led to reduced tax intakes, as a result of abolishing taxes levied on rural voters and introducing tax exemptions for powerful supporters. On the spending side, social development concerns compete with other public policy areas as well as the pressure to allocate resources for political purposes

M3 - Working paper

T3 - UNRISD Working Paper Series

BT - A Political Economy Analysis of Domestic Resource Mobilization in Uganda

PB - UNRISD

CY - Geneva

ER -