Intervention (Hidden)
To influence the bilateral balance of power between administrators and citizens, we develop a partnership with the leadership of ODEP (Observatoire de la Depense Publique), a major Congolese civil society organization widely respected for its effectiveness at combating abuses by tax officials. ODEP is a reputed organization that combats the leakage of tax revenues and corruption at the highest levels of the government. ODEP has leverage: they are recognized at multiple levels of the government administration and they hold a seat at the parliament and government meetings. Importantly, ODEP is an organization of tax experts. The pre-analysis paper shows the distribution of trust to different state and civil-society organizations, as reported in a survey by the subjects that were part of this experiment. Clearly, civil-society organizations enjoy much more trust than state agencies, and this applies to general civil-society organizations as well as ODEP. The choice to partner with ODEP is also a policy relevant one. In a state like the DRC, which does not have a credible internal mechanism to ensure that corrupt tax officials are sanctioned, non-state, civil-society organizations are in most cases the only alternative to such otherwise fundamental guarantors of the state of law. We examine a first step to explore the potential of homegrown civil society organizations to expand their scope of action when the state has failed to do so.
The tax consulting intervention:
When one talks to citizens across all communes of Kinshasa, it does not take long before one is struck by the complaints of citizens and businesses that tax officials, and administrators in general, abuse their power and take advantage of public ignorance about the tax code. Tax officials often come to collect the rental tax on tenants, despite the fact that it is supposed to be collected on landlords, with the explanation that the incidence of the tax is passed onto the tenant, so the tenant must pay, even if they also collect the same tax from the landlord. Examples of this phenomenon abound: small businesses are often told false liabilities on the basis of false size restrictions or turnover thresholds. If businesses fail to pay, not knowing if the rule is a false one, tax officials may be able to inflict harm on the businesses | more so than if the rule violation was false. Facing such uncertainty and risk, citizens and small businesses often pay without knowing if the payment is legal in order to be protected from potential sanctions. The tax code is extremely confusing, and popular narratives support the view that this confusion is intentionally created to increase the power of administrators to take advantage of uninformed households (Yet it is also partly the result of a complex decentralization process that assigns the right to tax to a multiplicity of agencies for political reasons). Whatever the source of the extreme ambiguity in the tax code, citizens claim that if they were better informed, they would be in a better position to negotiate, since tax officials would need to prove to their superiors and other actors that citizens are in violation, exposing the citizens to a non-trivial risk if they are caught collecting illegal taxes. Our survey data provides support for this information asymmetry.
To manipulate the informational foundation of citizens' bargaining power, we thus designed an intervention that provides, on a weekly basis, customized tax consultancy on the tax code to a random sample of citizens and businesses. Instructed and funded by our research team, the tax law experts of ODEP provided personalized weekly phone tax consultancy on what taxes are legal as well as the legal rates (based on the taxes paid in the previous week or expected to be paid in the coming week). As part of the tax consulting package, the ODEP experts also provided advice on how to navigate the administration in the event that the citizen was discontent with specific payments or interactions, usually a complex mechanism as well. For the sample of citizens in this treatment group, there was no claim that ODEP would take any action on the citizens' behalves: it was clearly communicated that the involvement of ODEP in this group was strictly limited to providing tax consulting in the form of weekly personalized tax consultancy by phone for 5 months.
The protection intervention: the power of social networks
When one witnesses any episode of bargaining for taxes or fees between citizens and administrators in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, it is straightforward to observe the importance of the unobserved power of the social network. Since the social connections of an individual or business are unobserved unless that citizen is known to the tax collector, administrators often engage in a lengthy negotiation process mostly aimed at extracting a costly signal about the connections of the citizen (A few anecdotes may provide useful motivating examples. In 2012 one of the authors of this paper was traveling through red zone, in the state controlled part, where Army battalions well known to be predatory and extremely violent raised barriers along the route in order to extort drivers. In each barrier, the author had to hide to avoid indicating that the car had international connections, which could raise expectations about a bribe, but could also signal that the car had powerful connections; thus to reduce the risk, the foreign author had to hide. However, in each roadblock, the driver barely stopped, showing a sticker facilitated by the drivers' uncle, which showed that the car had links to the intelligence services, one of the most powerful networks within the state administration. As a result, each time soldiers saw the sticker, they were intimidated: they realized the driver may have powerful connections (protectors), and extorting nuisance taxes could generate harmful retaliation). The importance of social networks, and the profoundly unequal access to powerful networks underscores Olken and Singhal (2011) finding that informal taxation is regressive. The equilibrium payments ultimately depend on the allocation of bargaining power in society, mostly determined by the power of citizens' social networks/power that is unequally distributed. Households' connections have strong impacts on the payments that administrators are able to extract. Usually, connections with high ranks in the most powerful state agencies are the most protective connections, because of the harm the network can inflict on the official intending to tax. For instance, high ranked Army officers, police officers, agents of the intelligence services, or officials in Ministries, offer the most protective connections. A major channel to empower citizens against administrators, thus, is to directly (re)distribute network links with powerful individuals or organizations, expanding access to bargaining power to protect against expropriation (For obvious ethical reasons, we did not consider creating links with powerful Army commanders, an example of useful patrons, but instead, with an internationally and nationally renowned organization that has leverage at the top level of the administration, ODEP. "Re"-distribution indicates that, potentially, there is a limited supply of resources, and thus network links that can be maintained, and thus extending links to the weakest citizens potentially redistributes them away from where they would otherwise have existed. This, however, is a general equilibrium effect that we do not study in this paper.)
We randomly assigned protection by ODEP to a separate sample of households and businesses. In this group, ODEP implemented weekly calls to gather data from the household about the universe of interactions with tax officials and administrations for the week. ODEP did not provide any tax consulting content received by the tax consulting treatment group described above. After collecting the data by phone on interactions, ODEP then guaranteed that they would investigate and act on instances of abuses through campaigns aimed at sanctioning the responsible administrators. Thus, ODEP took on the role of a powerful connection, as well as an intermediary with powerful networks within the state administration who can inflict harm on tax officials who commit abuses. In addition to passing along abuses reported by phone, however, ODEP can also draw on its credibility to undermine the reputation of individual tax collectors and tax collection agencies, thus allowing it to exert influence on the behavior of the supervisors towards mis-behaving tax officials.
Experiment 2: Anti-corruption campaign
After having gathered the data, we implemented a campaign in 50 % of the neighborhood of Kinshasa. The campaign aimed at increasing the cost of engaging in abusive expropriation by the lower level tax officials in the targeted neighborhoods. The campaign started with meetings with community mayors and neighborhood leaders, where the organization explained they would start exposing individual tax collectors suspected of abuse to the public and to their supervisors. They presented in each neighborhood a detailed list of abuses that they have recorded. In addition, they communicated with key relevant supervisors to communicate the abuses that took place in the selected neighborhoods. For the first 3 months of the data collection, the campaign was not implemented. Then, a random sample of neighborhoods were selected to receive the targeted campaign at the start of the 4th month. This allows us to use within neighborhood design, and differences in differences. We obtain 70 neighborhoods, 35 in treatment and 35 in control, with daily data during 4 months (pre-campaign is 3 months, post-campagin is 1 month). In addition, we use a target of 400 smartphone holders to examine the impact of the campaign.