Firms that do not report all sales for tax purposes (% of firms) - Country Ranking

Definition: Firms that do not report all sales for tax purposes are the percentage of firms that expressed that a typical firm reports less than 100 percent of sales for tax purposes; such firms are termed "informal firms."

Source: World Bank, Enterprise Surveys (http://www.enterprisesurveys.org/).

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Liberia 97.32 2009
2 Guinea 95.37 2006
3 Congo 90.02 2009
4 The Gambia 88.05 2006
5 Mauritania 82.50 2006
6 Yemen 82.33 2010
7 Turkey 82.14 2005
8 Sierra Leone 81.92 2009
9 Mongolia 80.40 2004
10 Montenegro 79.17 2003
11 Cambodia 78.11 2007
12 Eswatini 74.57 2006
13 Uganda 74.49 2006
14 Guyana 74.36 2004
15 Albania 73.72 2005
16 Dominican Republic 73.63 2005
17 Mozambique 73.10 2007
18 Tanzania 71.03 2006
19 Cameroon 70.38 2009
20 Algeria 70.37 2002
21 Vietnam 70.30 2005
22 Costa Rica 68.29 2005
23 Guinea-Bissau 68.19 2006
24 Côte d'Ivoire 68.06 2009
25 Nigeria 68.00 2007
26 Angola 67.80 2006
27 Dem. Rep. Congo 65.42 2006
28 Botswana 65.26 2006
29 Gabon 64.83 2009
30 Kenya 60.54 2007
31 Nicaragua 60.43 2006
32 India 59.24 2006
33 Ghana 59.20 2007
34 Mexico 57.65 2006
35 Syrian Arab Republic 57.06 2009
36 North Macedonia 55.73 2005
37 Malawi 55.30 2006
38 Czech Republic 54.91 2005
39 Panama 54.16 2006
40 Zambia 53.50 2002
41 Greece 53.19 2005
42 Ethiopia 51.60 2006
43 Bolivia 51.36 2006
44 China 49.45 2003
45 Argentina 49.09 2006
46 Uruguay 45.53 2006
47 Namibia 45.48 2006
48 Kyrgyz Republic 45.21 2005
49 Poland 44.58 2005
50 Guatemala 44.17 2006
51 Indonesia 44.04 2003
52 Georgia 43.81 2005
53 Korea 43.65 2005
54 Paraguay 42.81 2006
55 Burundi 42.73 2006
56 Oman 42.46 2003
57 El Salvador 42.28 2006
58 Sri Lanka 41.97 2004
59 Lithuania 41.53 2005
60 Moldova 41.42 2005
61 Russia 40.68 2005
62 Hungary 40.37 2005
63 South Africa 40.30 2007
64 Mali 39.71 2007
65 Benin 39.55 2004
66 Azerbaijan 38.97 2005
67 Slovenia 38.71 2005
68 Colombia 38.68 2006
69 Ecuador 37.57 2006
70 Portugal 37.25 2005
71 Tajikistan 36.43 2005
72 Mauritius 36.25 2009
73 Honduras 36.02 2006
74 Madagascar 35.61 2009
75 Lebanon 34.98 2009
76 Croatia 31.37 2005
77 Serbia 30.05 2005
78 Egypt 30.00 2008
79 Estonia 29.82 2005
80 Niger 29.73 2006
81 Rwanda 28.90 2006
82 Ireland 28.78 2005
83 Jamaica 28.77 2005
84 Bosnia and Herzegovina 28.39 2005
85 Chile 27.89 2006
86 Armenia 27.27 2005
87 Peru 27.15 2006
88 Ukraine 27.05 2005
89 Burkina Faso 26.45 2009
90 Romania 26.27 2005
91 Kazakhstan 25.81 2005
92 Latvia 25.21 2005
93 Senegal 21.63 2007
94 Slovak Republic 20.39 2005
95 Cabo Verde 19.57 2006
96 Belarus 18.69 2005
97 Spain 18.33 2005
98 Bulgaria 16.38 2007
99 Lao PDR 14.88 2006
100 Uzbekistan 13.81 2005
101 Jordan 12.95 2006
102 Pakistan 7.57 2007

More rankings: Africa | Asia | Central America & the Caribbean | Europe | Middle East | North America | Oceania | South America | World |

Limitations and Exceptions: The sampling methodology for Enterprise Surveys is stratified random sampling. In a simple random sample, all members of the population have the same probability of being selected and no weighting of the observations is necessary. In a stratified random sample, all population units are grouped within homogeneous groups and simple random samples are selected within each group. This method allows computing estimates for each of the strata with a specified level of precision while population estimates can also be estimated by properly weighting individual observations. The sampling weights take care of the varying probabilities of selection across different strata. Under certain conditions, estimates' precision under stratified random sampling will be higher than under simple random sampling (lower standard errors may result from the estimation procedure). The strata for Enterprise Surveys are firm size, business sector, and geographic region within a country. Firm size levels are 5-19 (small), 20-99 (medium), and 100+ employees (large-sized firms). Since in most economies, the majority of firms are small and medium-sized, Enterprise Surveys oversample large firms since larger firms tend to be engines of job creation. Sector breakdown is usually manufacturing, retail, and other services. For larger economies, specific manufacturing sub-sectors are selected as additional strata on the basis of employment, value-added, and total number of establishments figures. Geographic regions within a country are selected based on which cities/regions collectively contain the majority of economic activity. Ideally the survey sample frame is derived from the universe of eligible firms obtained from the country’s statistical office. Sometimes the master list of firms is obtained from other government agencies such as tax or business licensing authorities. In some cases, the list of firms is obtained from business associations or marketing databases. In a few cases, the sample frame is created via block enumeration, where the World Bank “manually” constructs a list of eligible firms after 1) partitioning a country’s cities of major economic activity into clusters and blocks, 2) randomly selecting a subset of blocks which will then be enumerated. In surveys conducted since 2005-06, survey documentation which explains the source of the sample frame and any special circumstances encountered during survey fieldwork are included with the collected datasets. Obtaining panel data, i.e. interviews with the same firms across multiple years, is a priority in current Enterprise Surveys. When conducting a new Enterprise Survey in a country where data was previously collected, maximal effort is expended to re-interview as many firms (from the prior survey) as possible. For these panel firms, sampling weights can be adjusted to take into account the resulting altered probabilities of inclusion in the sample frame.

Original Source Notes: Most surveys were administered using the Enterprise Surveys methodology as outlined in the Methodology page which can be found from www.enterprisesurveys.org. For surveys which did not strictly adhere to the global Enterprise Surveys methodology, plus Afg

Statistical Concept and Methodology: Firm-level surveys have been conducted since the 1990's by different units within the World Bank. Since 2005-06, most data collection efforts have been centralized within the Enterprise Analysis Unit. Surveys implemented by the Enterprise Analysis Unit follow the Global Methodology. Private contractors conduct the Enterprise Surveys on behalf of the World Bank. Due to sensitive survey questions addressing business-government relations and bribery-related topics, private contractors, rather than any government agency or an organization/institution associated with government, are hired by the World Bank to collect the data. Confidentiality of the survey respondents and the sensitive information they provide is necessary to ensure the greatest degree of survey participation, integrity and confidence in the quality of the data. Surveys are usually carried out in cooperation with business organizations and government agencies promoting job creation and economic growth, but confidentiality is never compromised. The Enterprise Survey is answered by business owners and top managers. Sometimes the survey respondent calls company accountants and human resource managers into the interview to answer questions in the sales and labor sections of the survey. Typically 1200-1800 interviews are conducted in larger economies, 360 interviews are conducted in medium-sized economies, and for smaller economies, 150 interviews take place. The manufacturing and services sectors are the primary business sectors of interest. This corresponds to firms classified with ISIC codes 15-37, 45, 50-52, 55, 60-64, and 72 (ISIC Rev.3.1). Formal (registered) companies with 5 or more employees are targeted for interview. Services firms include construction, retail, wholesale, hotels, restaurants, transport, storage, communications, and IT. Firms with 100% government/state ownership are not eligible to participate in an Enterprise Survey. Occasionally, for a few surveyed countries, other sectors are included in the companies surveyed such as education or health-related businesses. In each country, businesses in the cities/regions of major economic activity are interviewed. In some countries, other surveys, which depart from the usual Enterprise Survey methodology, are conducted. Examples include 1) Informal Surveys- surveys of informal (unregistered) enterprises, 2) Micro Surveys- surveys fielded to registered firms with less than five employees, and 3) Financial Crisis Assessment Surveys- short surveys administered by telephone to assess the effects of the global financial crisis of 2008-09. The Enterprise Surveys Unit uses two instruments: the Manufacturing Questionnaire and the Services Questionnaire. Although many questions overlap, some are only applicable to one type of business. For example, retail firms are not asked about production and nonproduction workers. The standard Enterprise Survey topics include firm characteristics, gender participation, access to finance, annual sales, costs of inputs/labor, workforce composition, bribery, licensing, infrastructure, trade, crime, competition, capacity utilization, land and permits, taxation, informality, business-government relations, innovation and technology, and performance measures. Over 90% of the questions objectively ascertain characteristics of a country’s business environment. The remaining questions assess the survey respondents’ opinions on what are the obstacles to firm growth and performance. The mode of data collection is face-to-face interviews.

Aggregation method: Unweighted average

Periodicity: Annual