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Discussion Paper Details
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Title: Threat of Taxation, Stagnation and Social Unrest: Evidence from 19th Century Sicily
Author(s): Gema Lax-Martinez, Dominic Rohner and Alessandro Saia
Publication Date: July 2020
Keyword(s): conflict, Fiscal, growth, regression discontinuity design, state capacity, taxation and Unrest
Programme Area(s): Development Economics, Economic History and Public Economics
Abstract: Taxation may trigger social unrest, as highlighted by historical examples. At the same time, tax incomes could boost state capacity which may in turn foster political stability. Understanding better the a priori ambiguous taxation-turmoil nexus is particularly relevant for low-income countries today -- yet unfortunately any causal evidence on this has been very scarce. We exploit a unique policy experiment in 19th century Sicily to identify with the help of a regression discontinuity design (RDD) the effect of taxation on social unrest. It turns out that it is mostly the threat of taxation that may distort economic investment and ultimately result in higher levels of political turmoil.
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Bibliographic Reference
Lax-Martinez, G, Rohner, D and Saia, A. 2020. 'Threat of Taxation, Stagnation and Social Unrest: Evidence from 19th Century Sicily'. London, Centre for Economic Policy Research. https://cepr.org/active/publications/discussion_papers/dp.php?dpno=14981