The OECD announced that it published the Revenue Statistics in Asia and the Pacific 2024 on 25 July 2024. The report states that tax revenues in Asia and the Pacific returned to their levels prior to the COVID-19 pandemic in 2022 amid a rebound in tourism and higher commodity prices.
This 11th edition of the report provides harmonised data on tax revenue for 36 economies in the region, including, for the first time, Azerbaijan, Hong Kong (China), Kiribati, the Marshall Islands, Sri Lanka, and Timor-Leste.
The average tax-to-GDP ratio in the Asia-Pacific region increased by 0.6 percentage points (p.p.) in 2022 to 19.3%, the same level as in 2019, prior to the COVID-19 pandemic. In comparison, the average tax-to-GDP ratio in the OECD declined by 0.2 p.p. to 34.0% in 2022, while the average for Latin America and the Caribbean rose by 0.3 p.p. to 21.5%. Africa’s average tax-to-GDP ratio was 15.6% in 2021.
In 2022, tax-to-GDP ratios across the 34 economies in the Asia-Pacific region for which data for 2022 is available ranged from 7.4% in Sri Lanka to 33.8% in New Zealand. In Australia and Japan, the tax-to-GDP ratio in 2021 was 29.5% and 34.1%, respectively, in both cases 1.1 p.p. higher than the previous year.
The largest increases in the tax-to-GDP ratio in 2022 occurred in Kyrgyzstan (3.1 p.p.), Kazakhstan (4.2 p.p.), Vanuatu (5.0 p.p.), and Timor-Leste (5.3 p.p.), while the most significant declines occurred in the Cook Islands (4.7 p.p.) and Nauru (6.7 p.p.).
Revenue increases in 2022 were driven by corporate income tax (CIT) and value-added tax (VAT). CIT revenue as a share of GDP rose by 0.5 p.p. across the Asia-Pacific region in 2022, while VAT revenue rose by 0.2 p.p. Revenue from social security contributions, personal income tax, and other taxes on goods and services all remained the same as a share of GDP.
The report also contains information on non-tax revenue for 22 of the 36 Asia-Pacific economies. Non-tax revenue fell in 16 of these economies in 2022, having fallen in 12 in 2021.
Non-tax revenue amounted to over 10% of GDP in five of the 22 economies in 2022: Bhutan (13.8%), Cook Islands (17.6%), the Marshall Islands (52.6%), Nauru (58.4%) and Tokelau (141.1%), with fishing rights accounting for a significant proportion of non-tax revenue in the three economies with the highest ratios.