Macroeconomic Impact of Value Added Tax in Nepal: A 2SLS and 3SLS Approach

Authors

  • Keshar Bahadur Kunwar Tikapur Multiple Campus, Far Western University
  • Ram Prasad Gyanwali Tribhuwan University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3126/fwr.v2i1.70534

Keywords:

Value added tax, total consumption, economic growth, government expendi ture, simultaneous equation

Abstract

The study’s aim to evaluate the impact of VAT on macroeconomic variables (TCON, GDP, Import (M) and GOVEXP) and the reverse effects of Macro variables on VAT. This study included macroeconomic development variables such as GDP, GDP (-1), VAT, remittance (REM), total consumption (TCON), export (X), import (M), gross fixed capital formation (GFCF), bank rate (BRATE), trade openness (TOPEN), government expenditure (GOVEXP) and one period lagged government expenditure (GOVEXP (-1)). However, this study has been enhanced over previous analyses by incorporating 45 years of nominal data from 1974/1975 to 2018/19. It examines the connection between VAT and significant macroeconomic variables such as GDP, GDP (-1), REM TCON, X, M, GFCF, BRATE, TOPEN, GOVEXP and GOVEXP (-1). To address the challenges of simultaneous equation bias and inconsistent findings, this study utilized the two-stage least squares (2SLS) and three-stage least squares (3SLS) methodologies to assess the impact of VAT on macroeconomic variables. The findings of the study are that value-added tax (VAT) negatively impacts TCON. VAT positively and significantly impacts on GDP, import(M), and GOVEXP. The study revealed that while TOPEN negatively affected Nepal’s GDP, GOVEXP, GFCF, and X had a significant and positive influence on GDP.

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Author Biographies

Keshar Bahadur Kunwar, Tikapur Multiple Campus, Far Western University

Associate Professor

Ram Prasad Gyanwali, Tribhuwan University

Professor

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Published

2024-10-07

How to Cite

Kunwar, K. B., & Gyanwali, R. P. (2024). Macroeconomic Impact of Value Added Tax in Nepal: A 2SLS and 3SLS Approach. Far Western Review, 2(1), 174–195. https://doi.org/10.3126/fwr.v2i1.70534

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Articles