J 2021

Corruption, Taxation and the Impact on the Shadow Economy

NĚMEC, Daniel; Eva KOTLÁNOVÁ; Igor KOTLÁN and Zuzana MACHOVÁ

Basic information

Original name

Corruption, Taxation and the Impact on the Shadow Economy

Authors

NĚMEC, Daniel; Eva KOTLÁNOVÁ; Igor KOTLÁN and Zuzana MACHOVÁ

Edition

Economies, BASEL, MDPI, 2021, 2227-7099

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Article in a journal

Country of publisher

Switzerland

Confidentiality degree

is not subject to a state or trade secret

References:

Marked to be transferred to RIV

Yes

RIV identification code

RIV/00216224:14560/21:00124223

Organization

Ekonomicko-správní fakulta – Repository – Repository

EID Scopus

Keywords in English

corruption; perceived corruption; DSGE modelling; taxation; tax evasion; shadow economy
Changed: 1/2/2026 00:51, RNDr. Daniel Jakubík

Abstract

In the original language

While assessing the economic impacts of corruption, the corruption-related transmission channels which influence taxation as such have to be duly considered. Taking the example of the Czech Republic, this article aims to evaluate the impacts corruption has on the size of the shadow economy as well as on the individual sources of long-term economic growth, making use of a transmission channel through which corruption affects the tax burden components. Using the method of an extended DSGE model, it confirms the initial assumption that an increase in perceived corruption supports the shadow economy’s growth, but at the same time, it demonstrates that corruption and especially its perception has a significantly different effect on two key areas—the capital accumulation and the labour force size. It further identifies another sector of the economy representing taxes which are prone to tax evasion while asserting that corruption has a much more destructive effect on this sector of the economy, offering generalized implications for other post-communist EU member states in a similar situation.

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