Taxes

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Taxes refer to funds originating from domestic taxes that are channelled to the water and sanitation sector via transfers from all levels of government, including national, regional and local (GLAAS, 2012). Taxes are typically used as subsidies or grants, for capital expenditure or operational and minor maintenance expenditure. More hidden forms of these subsidies may include tax rebates (e.g. on toilet construction materials), soft loans, transfers from local government housing taxes, donations, subsidised inputs (e.g., electricity services), or “dormant” equity investments (Hervé-Bazin, 2012). Subsidies from the national tax base include:

  • Subsidies to local or national water operators
  • Subsidies to infrastructure owners

Most lower-income countries do not collect enough tax at decentralised levels of governance to finance infrastructure construction (e.g. capital expenditure) (IRC and WSUP, 2012). Most taxes in lower income countries are collected at national level and distributed to the different regions according to an allocation formulae; and in general allocations for water and sanitation are very limited (WHO, 2010).

Examples

Government expenditure on sanitation and drinking-water
Government expenditure from taxes and transfers on sanitation and drinking-water ranged from 0.37% to 3.5% of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) (GLAAS, 2012, p. 28).


Figure 1. Public spending (from funds obtained through domestic taxes and external transfers) on sanitation and drinking-water as a percentage of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) (2010 data)<center>
<center>Source: 2011 GLAAS country survey; World Bank (2012)
Note: Not all countries reported contributions from regional and local governments (i.e. Egypt, Kenya and Yemen).