Fiscal policy in Chile: Hindering sustainable development by favoring myopic growth
Author
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Figueroa Benavides, Eugenio
Author
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López Vega, Ramón
Admission date
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2017-05-09T20:14:04Z
Available date
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2017-05-09T20:14:04Z
Publication date
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2011
Cita de ítem
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Serie Documentos de Trabajo No. 346, pp. 1 - 49, Noviembre, 2011
es_ES
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/143896
Abstract
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We show that the tax system in Chile is insufficient, inefficient and inequitable.
Insufficient because it does not yield enough revenues for the state to promote human
capital development and to face poverty in a more comprehensive way; inefficient
because it is highly unbalanced causing most of the tax burden to be concentrated in very
few taxes while neglecting the use of the least distortion-prone tax mechanisms available;
inequitable because it forces the middle and low income groups to shoulder most of the
tax burden while allowing the super rich to get away paying one of the lowest tax rates
among middle income and advanced countries. The consequence of the combined effect
of the two sides of this fiscal policy − taxation and public expenditures − is to artificially
increase the capital intensity of the economy, to deepen its dependency on natural
resource based and environmentally dirty industries, to handicap the creation of human
capital and to delay the evolution towards a knowledge-based economy. Fiscal policy has
thus negatively affected the long run growth potential of the economy and has
contributed to perpetuate a highly unequal distribution of wealth and to exacerbate
environmental and natural resource degradation.
es_ES
Lenguage
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en
es_ES
Publisher
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Universidad de Chile, Facultad de Economía y Negocios