@TechReport{CEPII:2018-24,
author={Sébastien Jean and Cristina Mitaritonna and Antoine Vatan},
title={Institutions and Customs Duty Evasion},
year=2018,
month=December,
institution={CEPII},
type={Working Papers},
url={https://www.cepii.fr/CEPII/fr/publications/wp/abstract.asp?NoDoc=12059},
number={2018-24},
abstract={Tariff receipts are important for many countries but their collection is often problematic. To analyze why and to what
extent this occurs we first model customs duty evasion as an interaction between customs officers considered to be
corruptible law enforcers, and importing firms. In this context, higher tariffs generally lead to greater customs duty
evasion but their marginal impact is decreasing, and may turn negative above a given threshold if customs officers
adapt their inspection effort endogenously. While transparency (the probability of effective control) always limits
evasion, we show that ease of enforcement (e.g. ease of establishing the shipment`s true value) matters only if
customs officers do not collude with importers. Our empirical analysis spans 55 importing countries over the period
2001-2010 and confirms our predictions. This lends support to the assumptions of endogenous inspection effort and
widespread collusion. World Trade Organization membership is found also to limit the extent of duty evasion.},
keywords={Tax Evasion ; Customs Duty ; Institutions ; International Trade}
}