Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 28 – Far fewer
federal subjects need to be subidized than currently are, Vladimir Olkhovik
says, because existing laws allow them to use their tax policies both to
attract more business that will ultimately boost tax revenues and also to
collect more money than many of them do at the present time.
Most commentaries on the fact that
so many regions have to receive subsidies focus on the fact that regions have
to transfer such a high percentage of the taxes they collect to Moscow and
ignore the possibilities they in fact have to use their rights to vary tax
policies to their own advantage, the Higher School of Economics analyst says.
Olkhovik says that many more regions
could do without subsidies if they would use the powers they have under
existing Russian law to boost taxes on certain things, like real property and
luxury cars, and to attract more business by giving tax advantages to new
investment (“Possibilities for the Development of the Tax Potential of Subjects
of the Russian Federation” (in Russian), Ekonomika regiona, 15:3 (2019):
938-951 at publications.hse.ru/articles/307962387,
summarized at iq.hse.ru/news/326641216.html).
He argues that the regions have many
possibilities for broadening their tax base
and thus their tax collections, something that means they would retain more
money even if they have to transfer the same percentage of taxes collected to
Moscow as now and that would allow them to give tax holidays to new investment,
thereby expanding their tax base in the future.
“Many Russian regions as a result of
large debts and low tax collections need money from the federal budget,”
Olkhovik says. In part that reflects the requirement that they transfer such a
high percentage of the taxes collected to the central government; but that is
only part of the explanation.
“One of the causes for the regions’
lack of their own means can be ineffective tax policy,” with regions choosing
not to tax some things or at lower rates than they could and thus reducing
their resources on their own and not just because of their transfer of tax
moneys to Moscow.
Some regions have been much more
effective in taking advantage of these possibilities, he says, than other; and
that difference goes a long way toward explaining why some federal subjects are
in significantly worse shape than others. Regional officials often don’t
recognize their powers in this regard or act in response to changes in Russian
tax policies.
Thus, last year, many regions did
not adopt legislation reflecting changes in all-Russian legislation concerning
the value of land against which taxes are to be calculated. As a result, they collected less than ten
percent of the taxes they would have been able to had they made this change.
The Higher School of Economics speciliat
adds that many regions are not using their legal powers to lower tax rates for
a time on new investments, something that would help them attract more business
and build their tax base in the future after those tax holidays end. Instead,
they often in a counterproductive way are imposing higher rates on new
investment than on old.
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