Summary
This technical note presents the Reverse Method, a novel indirect approach for estimating the global value-added tax (VAT) compliance gap. The Reverse Method leverages public datasets and a calibrated econometric model to produce scalable, comparable, and indicative VAT gap estimates for over 100 countries and multiple years. It builds on the IMF’s RA-GAP (Revenue Administration Gap Analysis Program) framework, using C-efficiency, tax expenditure data, and national accounts to approximate the compliance gap as a residual. The methodology enables broad cross-country analysis, supports tax gap benchmarking, and provides indicative estimates even where detailed data is scarce. While not a substitute for country-specific RA-GAP assessments, the Reverse Method offers a practical tool for monitoring global VAT compliance trends, informing tax gap analysis, and facilitating international comparisons. Its results highlight differences by income level and region, and the approach is designed for continuous improvement as more data becomes available.
Subject: Revenue administration, Revenue Administration Gap Analysis Program (RA-GAP), Revenue performance assessment, Tax efficiency, Tax gap, Taxes, Value added tax
Keywords: Asia and Pacific, Central Asia, Europe, Middle East, Middle East and Central Asia, Revenue Administration Gap Analysis Program (RA-GAP), Tax efficiency, Tax gap, Value-added tax, Western Hemisphere
