Abstract:
The main aim of this study is to demystify the mystery surrounding the belief that, high
tax revenue growth rates engineered through the government multiplier process. The
relationship between government tax revenue growth and economic growth is investigated
for Ethiopia during the period 1974/75-2013/14. Theoretically and empirically it has been
shown that taxes affect the allocation of resources and often distort economic growth.
While, analyzing the long run and short run relationship between government tax revenue
growth and economic growth the study applied Johansen’s cointegration test, VAR, VECM,
and granger causality test,
Government tax revenue growth in general and with its component though affect
economic growth found to have no causal relationship with economic growth in the long
run. This implies there is fiscal independence between tax revenue and economic growth.
Furthermore, in the short run the finding showed that there is independence relationship
and the speed of adjustment is slow; only 27% and 7% for the components and total tax
revenue growth with economic growth models respectively. However, compared with post
tax reform periods the latter has high speed of adjustment; meaning the speed of
disturbances corrected each year in the short run become fast. Based on the findings the
study highlighted some major issues that policymakers should consider for effective
taxation policy formulation and implementation in line with the dynamic nature of the
Ethiopian economy