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OECD Tax Policy Reviews: Costa Rica 2017

image of OECD Tax Policy Reviews: Costa Rica 2017

This report is part of a new series of publications entitled OECD Tax Policy Reviews. These country reviewsare intended to provide independent, comprehensive and comparative assessments of OECD member and non-member countries’ tax systems from a tax policy perspective as well as concrete recommendations for tax policy reform. By benchmarking countries’ tax systems and identifying tailored tax policy reform options, the ultimate objective of the reviews is to enhance the design of existing tax policies and to support the adoption and implementation of tax policy reforms.

This first edition provides a comprehensive tax policy assessment of Costa Rica’s current tax system as well as tax policy reform recommendations. The report is divided into five chapters, starting with a general chapter providing an overview of key macroeconomic and tax revenue trends (Chapter 1), followed by an assessment of the main types of taxes of the Costa Rican tax system, including corporate income taxes (Chapter 2), personal income taxes and social security contributions (Chapter 3), the general sales tax (Chapter 4) and environmentally-related taxes (Chapter 5)

English Also available in: Spanish

Executive summary

Costa Rica's tax revenues are close to the Latin American and Caribbean (LAC) average but, notwithstanding recent efforts to reduce expenditure, they are insufficient to finance the country's current spending needs. Higher tax revenues should primarily come from broadening tax bases as well as from enhanced efforts to tackle tax avoidance and evasion and to bring in more informal taxpayers within the formal economy.

English Also available in: Spanish

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