Educational Level and Tax Compliance: Empirical Evidence From Nigeria

Stanley Ogoun, Godspower Anthony Ekpulu

Abstract


The study interrogates the relationship between educational level and tax compliance in Nigeria. The study employs the ex post facto research design to ascertain how government investment in education enhances tax compliance. The study covers 17 years (2002-2018) for both tax revenue (a surrogate for tax compliance) and education expenditure (a surrogate for educational level). From the empirical results, the study concludes that there is a positive nexus between government expenditure on education and tax revenue. The study, therefore, recommends that as a matter of necessity, the government should invest more in the overall educational demand of her citizens not only from tax revenues but from other oil and non-oil sources. The governments, from the federal and state levels, should act as a matter national priority endeavour to meet up with the international budgetary benchmark allocation for education, as recommended by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) in its Education for All (EFA) document 2000-2015. This will give Nigerians more access to quality education that would result in moving up the global ranking in HDI with its resultant benefits.


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DOI: https://doi.org/10.5296/ijafr.v10i1.16106

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Copyright (c) 2020 Stanley Ogoun, Godspower Anthony Ekpulu

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International Journal of Accounting and Financial Reporting  ISSN 2162-3082

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