Tax Compliance, Governance Quality and Human Development Index in Nigeria

This article investigated the relationship between human development, tax compliance and the quality of governance in the case of Nigeria which is analyzed between 1999 and 2023. The sources used to obtain the data of the study consist of websites of United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), World Bank, Federal Inland Revenue Service and National Bureau of Statistics (NBS). The data was not normally distributed and therefore the spearman correlation and quantile regression were used to study the relation at the lower quantile which applies to the low-HDI countries such as Nigeria. The results indicated that overall negative effect of compliance with taxes on HDI, meaning that the trend of collecting more taxes does not always correspond to better human development. The latter can be caused by misutilization of tax revenues, corruption, or low quality of government services. On the other hand, governance quality as denoted by Corruption Perception Index (CPI) exerts a positive and significant impact upon HDI pointing at the significance of transparency and accountability. The paper highlights that to make taxation a positive feature in human development, there should be a proper tax revenue allocation, better governance and citizens friendly tax policies.