In 2017, tax-to-GDP ratios in the Asia and Pacific region ranged from 11.5% in Indonesia to 32.0% in New Zealand. The tax-to-GDP ratio refers to total tax revenue, including social security contributions, as a percentage of gross domestic product (GDP). All economies in this publication had lower ratios in 2017 than the OECD average of 34.2%, whereas eight of the economies included in this publication had tax-to-GDP ratios above the Latin American and the Caribbean (LAC) average of 22.8%.
Six of the eight Asian countries covered in this publication had a tax-to-GDP ratio below 18% (the exceptions being Japan and Korea) whereas six of the nine Pacific economies had a tax-to-GDP ratio above 24% (the exceptions being Papua New Guinea, Tokelau and Vanuatu).
Since 2016, nearly two-thirds of the economies included in this publication for which 2017 data is available experienced increases in their tax-to-GDP ratios. The largest increases were seen in Fiji and Vanuatu (1.7 percentage points and 1.9 percentage points, respectively). Three other economies (Kazakhstan, the Solomon Islands and Singapore) had increases greater than 1.0 percentage point. Most of the decreases were comparatively small: Malaysia and Papua New Guinea experienced the largest decreases between 2016 and 2017 (a decrease of 0.7 percentage points for both countries).
Eleven economies included in the publication have increased their tax-to-GDP ratios over the last decade, with the exception of Australia, Indonesia, Kazakhstan, Papua New Guinea, New Zealand and Vanuatu. The highest increases between 2007 and 2017 were observed in Fiji and the Solomon Islands (4.4 and 4.5 percentage points, respectively), primarily due to increases in revenue from income tax and other taxes on goods and services in both countries. Across the same period, Kazakhstan and Papua New Guinea experienced the largest decreases in their tax-to-GDP ratios (9.7 and 7.0 percentage points, respectively), driven in both cases by decreases in corporate income tax (CIT) revenues. These are attributed to the impact of declining prices of natural resources (during the global financial crisis and in 2014-15) on the profitability of companies in the mining and oil sector in both countries, as well as to a reduction of CIT rates in Kazakhstan.