Issue #2 (Volume 15 2026)
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Articles8
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31 Authors
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38 Tables
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17 Figures
- Asian nations
- awareness
- Bayesian vector autoregressive
- cross-border taxation
- debt
- debt dynamics
- debt overhang
- digital economy
- digital services tax
- DIGITAXEU model
- e-filing
- economic growth
- education expenditure
- European Union
- expenditure
- expenditures
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Crowding-out effects of regional transfer fund allocations on local development based on a Bayesian VAR study in West Sumatra
Abror Abror
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Dodi Devianto
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Sri Maryati
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Muhammad Irfan
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Mutia Yollanda
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Primawati Primawati
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Ratnawati Raflis
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Medi Iswandi
doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.21511/pmf.15(2).2026.01
Public and Municipal Finance Volume 15, 2026 Issue #2 pp. 1-16
Views: 294 Downloads: 82 TO CITE АНОТАЦІЯType of the article: Research Article
Abstract
Regional transfers are a key instrument of regional fiscal policy that promote balanced development and reduce disparities across districts, yet the behavioral responses of local governments to these inflows remain insufficiently understood. This study examines how regional transfer fund allocations influence government expenditure, unemployment, infrastructure development, and regional revenue in West Sumatra using quarterly data for 2014–2024. A Bayesian Vector Autoregressive framework is employed to address small-sample limitations and to capture the dynamic responses to transfer shocks. The results show that increases in regional transfers have limited, short-lived effects on unemployment, while capital expenditure on basic infrastructure declines, indicating potential crowding-out of certain government spending categories. At the same time, regional revenue responds positively, suggesting that transfers can support local fiscal capacity in the short term. These findings highlight that, although regional transfers can facilitate immediate fiscal stabilization, they may hinder long-term infrastructure investment unless accompanied by performance-based fiscal mechanisms. Improving transfer design and accountability is therefore essential to ensure that fiscal resources promote sustainable development outcomes.Acknowledgments
This research is a grant from the Ministry of Higher Education, Science, and Technology of the Republic of Indonesia under the Impactful Leading Consortium Research Scheme (RIKUB Scheme) in accordance with research contract number 008/C3/DT.05.00/RIKUB/2025. -
Assessing the impact of debt overhang on public investment and economic growth in Nigeria
Diekola I. Adewuyi
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Oyinlola Morounfoluwa Akinyede
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Taofeek Sola Afolabi
doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.21511/pmf.15(2).2026.02
Public and Municipal Finance Volume 15, 2026 Issue #2 pp. 17-26
Views: 186 Downloads: 57 TO CITE АНОТАЦІЯType of the article: Research Article
Abstract
This study assesses the impact of debt overhang on Nigeria's public investment and economic growth. The paper utilized the Autoregressive Distributed Lag (ARDL) with annual time-series data from 1981 to 2024 and Myers' debt overhang, fiscal sustainability, and crowding-out effect theories. Public investment growth and economic growth rate were dependent variables, while debt overhang was independent. The control variables included interest rate, exchange rate, and inflation rate. The two models demonstrated a long-term cointegration connection. The results demonstrate a paradox which has practical implications because debt overhang produces statistically significant effects which show opposite results through its impact on both dependent variables.. Specifically, a unit increase in debt overhang is associated with a 0.744-unit increase in public investment (β = 0.744, p < 0.05) and a 0.153-unit decrease in economic growth (β = –0.153, p < 0.05). The findings support the efficiency trap hypothesis by determining that debt accumulation leads to increased investment but does not produce matching economic growth due to inefficient resource allocation in debt financing. In the short run, debt overhang negatively affects both variables, with the error correction term confirming rapid adjustment to equilibrium. Therefore, Nigeria is operating in an “efficiency trap.” The debt used to finance investment does not translate into economic growth due to poor project selection, resource misallocation, and inefficient project implementation. The null hypotheses for both models were of no significant effect and were rejected. We recommend that policymakers prioritize project appraisal methods and ensure that borrowed funds are directed toward quality investments. -
Public education expenditure and income inequality in Vietnam: The moderating role of institutional quality
Public and Municipal Finance Volume 15, 2026 Issue #2 pp. 27-47
Views: 159 Downloads: 23 TO CITE АНОТАЦІЯType of the article: Research Article
Abstract
Income inequality remains a major challenge for inclusive development, particularly in emerging economies where fiscal policy plays a central role in redistributing income opportunities. This study examines how public education expenditure affects income inequality across Vietnam’s 63 provinces over the period 2011–2024 and whether institutional quality moderates this relationship under spatial dependence. Using panel and spatial econometric approaches, with the Spatial Durbin Model (SDM) as the primary specification, the analysis captures both within-province effects and interprovincial spillovers. The results show that public education expenditure is positively associated with income inequality in the short- to medium-term. A 1% increase in education spending raises the Gini coefficient by approximately 0.067-0.157 percentage points within provinces, with larger spillover effects observed across neighboring provinces. However, institutional quality significantly mitigates this effect. Interaction variables based on the Provincial Competitiveness Index (PCI) and the Public Administration Performance Index (PAPI) are negative and statistically significant, indicating that stronger institutional quality dampens the inequality-increasing effect of education expenditure. The findings also confirm that spatial dependence is pronounced, and education spending generates meaningful spillovers, indicating that inequality outcomes in one province are partly shaped by spending patterns in neighboring provinces. Overall, the findings suggest that expanding education budgets alone is unlikely to deliver equitable outcomes without parallel reforms that strengthen transparency, accountability, and performance-based allocation, alongside regional coordination to manage spatial externalities.Acknowledgments
This study is funded by the University of Economics Ho Chi Minh City (UEH), Vietnam. -
The development of the European Union framework for the taxation of the digital economy: Evidence from selected member states
Andrea Rados Bajlo , Anita Radman Peša
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Sonja Brlečić Valčić
doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.21511/pmf.15(2).2026.04
Public and Municipal Finance Volume 15, 2026 Issue #2 pp. 48-56
Views: 106 Downloads: 13 TO CITE АНОТАЦІЯType of the article: Research Article
Abstract
This study develops DIGTAXEU, a conceptual model that elucidates the primary determinants of digital economy taxation in the EU and their interrelationships. The model identifies nine dimensions, including the definition of the digital economy, profit shifting, jurisdictional scope, taxation of multinational enterprises, revenue thresholds, fair taxation, international agreements, political and economic diversity among Member States, and unilateral tax measures. The DIGTAXEU model was developed using interviews with four experts representing key institutions in international and European Union tax policy, including the OECD, the European Commission, and the Permanent Representations of Austria and Hungary to the European Union. The findings demonstrate that digital taxation in the EU is driven by the interplay of cross-border digital business models, fragmented national tax responses, and incomplete international coordination. Consequently, DIGTAXEU provides a structured analytical framework for understanding regulatory fragmentation and informing the development of a more coherent and equitable EU digital tax architecture. The identified dimensions function in a mutually dependent manner, shaping the consistency and overall effectiveness of digital tax policy. At the same time, disparities among national tax measures, together with the absence of comprehensive international harmonization, continue to hinder the development of a unified digital taxation framework.Acknowledgment
Funded by the European Union – NextGenerationEU: Incentives towards the optimization of digital tax policies and responsibilities in the EU (DIGTAXEU) IP-UNIZD 2025–2029. The views and opinions expressed are those of the authors only and do not necessarily reflect the official views of the European Union or the European Commission. Neither the European Union nor the European Commission can be held responsible for them. -
Assessing fiscal resilience in the EU during COVID-19: The public finance triangle
Lukáš Cíbik
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Richard Brix
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Martin Švikruha
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Dalibor Mikuš
doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.21511/pmf.15(2).2026.05
Public and Municipal Finance Volume 15, 2026 Issue #2 pp. 57-67
Views: 86 Downloads: 27 TO CITE АНОТАЦІЯType of the article: Research Article
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic represented a systemic shock to public finances in the European Union, as governments simultaneously faced revenue disruptions, expenditure pressures, and rapid debt accumulation. This study aims to identify and quantify the impact of the pandemic on public finances in European Union Member States and to assess fiscal resilience and long-term sustainability using the Public Finance Triangle, with particular emphasis on how stabilization policies affected its geometric area. The analysis is based on annual Eurostat data for all EU-27 countries covering the period 2011–2021. Year-on-year changes in public revenues, public expenditures, and public debt are integrated into a synthetic geometric indicator that captures their joint fiscal dynamics. The results show that in 2020, the average triangle area at the EU level declined from 14,518 units, representing the 2011–2019 average, to 12,777 units, which corresponds to a decrease of 11.99%. The strongest contractions were recorded in Estonia (−52.43%), Malta (−23.46%), and Lithuania (−22.45%), while the smallest declines were observed in Finland (−9.58%) and Sweden (−10.32%). In 2021, the average triangle area increased to 14,847 units, exceeding the pre-pandemic benchmark by 2.27%, and 20 out of 27 Member States surpassed their long-term averages. The strongest recoveries were observed in Cyprus (+14.34%) and Lithuania (+11.15%), with recovery driven primarily by public revenue dynamics. The findings confirm a universal deterioration of fiscal resilience in 2020 followed by a heterogeneous recovery in 2021, and provide policy-relevant implications for strengthening revenue capacity and ensuring sustainable debt management under future systemic shocks.Acknowledgment
This paper has been supported by project VEGA 1/0265/25. -
Taxpayer compliance among MSMEs in Indonesia: Moderating role of e-filing on tax authority services, awareness, and tax sanctions
Nela Safelia
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Wiwik Tiswiyanti
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Fredy Olimsar
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Nur Hasanah
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Riski Hernando
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Wirmie Eka Putra
doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.21511/pmf.15(2).2026.06
Public and Municipal Finance Volume 15, 2026 Issue #2 pp. 68-79
Views: 97 Downloads: 13 TO CITE АНОТАЦІЯType of the article: Research Article
Abstract
This study investigates the impact of tax authority services, awareness, and tax sanctions on MSMEs’ tax compliance, with e-filing as a moderating variable. The study is inspired by the low level of tax compliance among MSMEs in emerging economies. A quantitative analysis was conducted using the PLS-SEM approach. Data were collected between January and March 2025 through a questionnaire administered to 100 MSME taxpayers, who were either firm owners or financial managers registered with local tax offices in Indonesia. The results indicate that taxpayer awareness has a positive effect on taxpayer compliance (β = 0.169; p < 0.05), while tax authority services show a negative effect (β = –0.189; p < 0.05). Tax sanctions had no effect on compliance (β = –0.081; p > 0.05). Furthermore, e-filing moderates the relationship between taxpayer awareness and compliance (β = 0.214; p < 0.05), but it does not moderate the effects of tax authority services and tax sanctions. The model explains 13.3% of the variance in taxpayer compliance (R² = 0.133), indicating that additional factors may influence compliance behavior. These findings highlight the importance of integrating taxpayer education with digital tax systems to enhance voluntary compliance. The study suggests that improving awareness, supported by accessible technology, is more effective than relying solely on service quality or sanctions in regional MSME contexts.Acknowledgment
We would like to thank Universitas Jambi for the funding support of research schemes with Rector Decree of Universitas Jambi Number 1654/UN21/PT/2024 dated June 12, 2024, and Agreement/Contract Letter Number 74/UN21.11/PT.01.05/SPK/2024, dated June 14, 2024.
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Monetary and real consequences of military expenditures in Iraq
Public and Municipal Finance Volume 15, 2026 Issue #2 pp. 80-90
Views: 51 Downloads: 9 TO CITE АНОТАЦІЯType of the article: Research Article
Abstract
The purpose of this study is to analyze the effects generated by military spending in Iraq during the pre- and post-ISIS periods, covering the years from 2004 to 2024. The study focuses on the real and monetary implications of military expenditure by identifying the impact and direction of changes in military spending on a set of selected variables. The statistical bulletins of the Central Bank of Iraq and reports of the Iraqi Ministry of Finance were analyzed. Regression analysis and confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) using Amos 22.0 were adopted. All the study hypotheses were assessed, and all relationships were significant, as it became clear that military spending has a positive impact on the monetary base (+0.74), market value of the Iraqi stock market (+0.73), and credit provided to the government (+0.68), meaning that there is a direct relationship. Moreover, the study found a negative impact on the inflation rate (–0.64), number of victims (–0.24), economic growth (–0.26), and assets of commercial banks (–0.47), revealing an inverse relationship between the studied variables and military spending. The central conclusion of the study is that military spending in Iraq, given its growing significance over the past decades and its continued presence in federal government budgets, has become a factor influencing many economic indicators. -
Assessing the impact of trade deficits on public debt in Asian economies under inflation volatility
Public and Municipal Finance Volume 15, 2026 Issue #2 pp. 91-106
Views: 47 Downloads: 6 TO CITE АНОТАЦІЯType of the article: Research Article
Abstract
Public debt has emerged as a critical macroeconomic issue in many Asian economies, where persistent trade imbalances and inflation volatility continue to exacerbate fiscal pressures. A clear understanding of the causal mechanisms linking these factors to public debt is therefore essential for effective fiscal and monetary policymaking. This study examines the causal effects of trade deficits and inflation on public debt using balanced panel data from 31 Asian countries over the period 2005–2022, where annual observations from all countries were combined into a pooled panel dataset for econometric estimation. To capture both long-run and short-run dynamics, the analysis employs the Autoregressive Distributed Lag (ARDL) model and the Cross-Sectionally Augmented ARDL (CS-ARDL) approach.
The empirical findings reveal that trade balance and inflation exert statistically significant long-run effects on public debt. Improvements in the trade balance are associated with a substantial reduction in public debt, while higher inflation is also linked to lower public debt levels in the long run. In the short run, changes in the trade balance do not have a significant impact, while inflation effects remain negative but statistically insignificant. The error correction term (–0.196) indicates a relatively rapid adjustment toward long-run equilibrium. Panel causality test results further reveal bidirectional relationships among public debt, trade balance, and inflation, implying mutual feedback effects. Overall, the findings highlight the importance of improving trade performance and maintaining stable inflation to support long-term debt sustainability in Asian economies.

