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Miguel Almunia is an Associate Professor of Economics at CUNEF Universidad (Madrid) and a Research Affiliate at CEPR, IFS and IGC. Previously, he was an Assistant Professor of Economics at the University of Warwick.
He obtained a PhD in Economics from UC Berkeley and an MPA/ID from Harvard Kennedy School. He does research in the fields of public finance and development economics with a particular focus on the effects of government policies--in particular taxation and regulation--on the behaviour of firms and households.
Recent work by Miguel Almunia
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VAT in developing countries: flawed, but irreplaceable
Informality, compliance costs, and weak administrative capacity all constrain the effectiveness of VAT in lower-income countries. However, it is a crucial source of revenue that is better than the alternatives, so governments should focus on reforms ...
Published 04.04.24
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Strategic or confused? Firm behaviour and missing millions in Uganda’s VAT
A quarter of Ugandan firms appear to consistently make costly mistakes, with potentially far-reaching consequences for theory and policy design
Published 22.11.21