Tunisia | Taxes on exports (% of tax revenue)
Taxes on exports are all levies on goods being transported out of the country or services being delivered to nonresidents by residents. Rebates on exported goods that are repayments of previously paid general consumption taxes, excise taxes, or import duties are deducted from the gross amounts receivable from these taxes, not from amounts receivable from export taxes. Limitations and exceptions: For most countries central government finance data have been consolidated into one account, but for others only budgetary central government accounts are available. Countries reporting budgetary data are noted in the country metadata. Because budgetary accounts may not include all central government units (such as social security funds), they usually provide an incomplete picture. In federal states the central government accounts provide an incomplete view of total public finance. Data on government revenue and expense are collected by the IMF through questionnaires to member countries and by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). Despite IMF efforts to standardize data collection, statistics are often incomplete, untimely, and not comparable across countries. Statistical concept and methodology: The IMF's Government Finance Statistics Manual 2014, harmonized with the 2008 SNA, recommends an accrual accounting method, focusing on all economic events affecting assets, liabilities, revenues, and expenses, not just those represented by cash transactions. It accounts for all changes in stocks, so stock data at the end of an accounting period equal stock data at the beginning of the period plus flows over the period. The 1986 manual considered only debt stocks. Government finance statistics are reported in local currency. Many countries report government finance data by fiscal year; see country metadata for information on fiscal year end by country.
Publisher
The World Bank
Origin
Tunisian Republic
Records
63
Source
Tunisia | Taxes on exports (% of tax revenue)
1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
0.9478673 1972
0.82493126 1973
1.59132007 1974
6.18966496 1975
2.15248963 1976
2.01630202 1977
1.31719473 1978
1.09907364 1979
1.30516685 1980
1.42127471 1981
1.00502513 1982
0.83365201 1983
0.95011876 1984
0.77720207 1985
0.49618557 1986
0.6052536 1987
0.43368065 1988
0.4915912 1989
0.43556832 1990
0.4771615 1991
0.32388952 1992
0.29541618 1993
0.29540748 1994
0.2461926 1995
0.22473098 1996
0.24107776 1997
0.14067651 1998
0.11907734 1999
0.19723866 2000
0.14948164 2001
0.14776563 2002
0.13120589 2003
2004
0.09362111 2005
0.1298732 2006
0.2324334 2007
0.22151815 2008
0.13346141 2009
0.13781047 2010
0.13169543 2011
0.13656791 2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
Tunisia | Taxes on exports (% of tax revenue)
Taxes on exports are all levies on goods being transported out of the country or services being delivered to nonresidents by residents. Rebates on exported goods that are repayments of previously paid general consumption taxes, excise taxes, or import duties are deducted from the gross amounts receivable from these taxes, not from amounts receivable from export taxes. Limitations and exceptions: For most countries central government finance data have been consolidated into one account, but for others only budgetary central government accounts are available. Countries reporting budgetary data are noted in the country metadata. Because budgetary accounts may not include all central government units (such as social security funds), they usually provide an incomplete picture. In federal states the central government accounts provide an incomplete view of total public finance. Data on government revenue and expense are collected by the IMF through questionnaires to member countries and by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). Despite IMF efforts to standardize data collection, statistics are often incomplete, untimely, and not comparable across countries. Statistical concept and methodology: The IMF's Government Finance Statistics Manual 2014, harmonized with the 2008 SNA, recommends an accrual accounting method, focusing on all economic events affecting assets, liabilities, revenues, and expenses, not just those represented by cash transactions. It accounts for all changes in stocks, so stock data at the end of an accounting period equal stock data at the beginning of the period plus flows over the period. The 1986 manual considered only debt stocks. Government finance statistics are reported in local currency. Many countries report government finance data by fiscal year; see country metadata for information on fiscal year end by country.
Publisher
The World Bank
Origin
Tunisian Republic
Records
63
Source