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2 - Historical Property Threats and Contemporary Tax Burdens

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 January 2021

Gabriel Ondetti
Affiliation:
Missouri State University
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Summary

This chapter elaborates the argument developed inby empirically evaluating existing theories of the tax burden and using that analysis to construct an explanation of variance among the case study countries. While most theories are unconvincing, three variables from the literature do resonate with the cases: non-tax natural resource revenues, certain distinctive features of the Brazilian and Chilean constitutions and, most crucially, an expanded version of the power resource perspective, which suggests that the tax burden reflects the balance of power been statist and anti-statist forces. The shortcoming of this argument is that it does not explain cross-national differences in this power balance. Hence, the chapter develops an account, drawing on path dependence theory, tracing these differences to the occurrence or not of reform waves that threatened private property. Where such waves occurred, in Chile and Mexico, they impeded future taxation by prompting the formation of enduring anti-statist blocs anchored by peak business associations and rightist parties. In Argentina and Brazil, in contrast, such waves did not occur and anti-statism remained a less powerful force.

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Property Threats and the Politics of Anti-Statism
The Historical Roots of Contemporary Tax Systems in Latin America
, pp. 26 - 65
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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