Universiti Teknologi Malaysia Institutional Repository

Direct tax, indirect tax and economic activities in developing countries: empirical evidence based on Malaysia data

Zakaria, Z. and Nabi, M. H. (2016) Direct tax, indirect tax and economic activities in developing countries: empirical evidence based on Malaysia data. Advanced Science Letters, 22 (5-6). pp. 1384-1387. ISSN 1936-6612

Full text not available from this repository.

Official URL: https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2....

Abstract

Economists argued that macroeconomic activity will be affected differently whether through indirect taxes or direct taxes. Therefore, this paper aims to examine the causality relationship between two types of tax categories (direct tax and indirect tax) and major macroeconomic variables based on Malaysia data, namely consumption, investment, government expenditure and exports. In this paper, the bi-variate causality relationship between direct tax, indirect tax and the macroeconomic variables studied were examined using Granger causality tests that were proposed by Toda and Yamamoto. The data for the analysis consist of quarterly data covering the period from 1996 to 2013. The findings from the causality tests show that in the short run, direct tax in Malaysia causes household consumption and private investment, but not government expenditure and exports. Similarly, indirect tax also causes households consumption and private investment, but not the government expenditure and export. Both types of taxes do not causally affect the level of government expenditure in Malaysia.

Item Type:Article
Uncontrolled Keywords:Consumption, Direct tax
Subjects:H Social Sciences > HF Commerce
Divisions:International Business School
ID Code:71620
Deposited By: Widya Wahid
Deposited On:15 Nov 2017 04:22
Last Modified:15 Nov 2017 04:22

Repository Staff Only: item control page