Financing Security through Elite Taxation: The Case of Colombia’s ‘Democratic Security Taxes’

Abstract

Governments across the developing world in general, and Latin America in particular, tend to have difficulty in raising taxes from elites. In 2002, however, the Colombian government introduced the first of a series of wealth taxes aimed solely at rich individuals and companies with large liquid assets. Revenue from these taxes, which amounted to about 1 per cent of GDP, was earmarked for security. Drawing on elite interviews, surveys, government documents, and media sources, I examine why these taxes were introduced, and explore three different explanations: the combination of fiscal and security crises; elite solidarity; and perceptions that the government was making Colombia a safer place. It was the interaction of all three factors that led to this unusual outcome.

Citation

Flores-Macías, G.A. Financing Security through Elite Taxation: The Case of Colombia’s ‘DemocraticSecurity Taxes’. Institute of Development Studies, Brighton, UK (2012) 32 pp. ISBN 978 1 78118 087 7 [ICTD Working Paper 3]

Financing Security through Elite Taxation: The Case of Colombia’s ‘Democratic Security Taxes’

Updates to this page

Published 1 January 2012