Abstract
Walk through any bustling street in Harare or any other Zimbabwean city and you’ll see it: the vibrant hum of informal businesses—hair salons, food vendors, taxi drivers, clothing stalls, and more. These are not just side hustles or temporary gigs. For many, they are the backbone of survival. Yet, when it comes to taxation, Zimbabwe’s informal sector is often treated with suspicion, pressure, and punitive measures. A recent study makes it clear that policymakers need to use more carrots than sticks when engaging with informal traders.
| Originalsprog | Engelsk |
|---|---|
| Publikationsdato | 19 aug. 2025 |
| Udgiver | International Centre for Tax and Development (ICTD) |
| Status | Udgivet - 19 aug. 2025 |
Publikation
- 1 Papers og Working Papers
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Unpacking informality for tax purposes: Evidence from urban Zimbabwe
Gwaindepi , A. & Venganai , H., 12 aug. 2025, Brighton : Institute of Development Studies, 57 s. (ICTD Working Paper; Nr. 225).Publikation: Working Paper, Paper, Policy Brief, Brief, Impact › Papers og Working Papers › Forskning › peer review
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