The World Bank
NOVEMBER
2001
NUMBER 60
PUBLIC SECTOR
Strengthening Peru's tax agency
Peru's semiautonomous revenue authority is one of the developing world's most
successful examples of tax administration reform. Why? And what are the implica-
tions for other developing countries?
Before reform, Peru's tax administration  had several key elements: granting the
was riddled with corruption and on the  National Tax Administration Superinten-
verge of collapse. The tax agency neither  dency (SUNAT) meaningful administrative
recruited experienced professionals nor  and financial autonomy, implementing rad-
provided training. Salaries were low, yet the  ical personnel reform, investing in infra-  Peru overhauled its
wage bill was high due to overstaffing. Most  structure and information technology, and
general directors were political appointees  generating public support.        approach to tax
whose tenure averaged less than two years.
Moreover, the agency did not have adequate  The foundations of SUNAT           policy and
resources to finance its operations, let alone  The government of Peru decided to over-
invest in infrastructure. As a result tax col-  haul tax policy and tax administration at the  administration -with
lections declined, a trend exacerbated by  same time. Tax policy set out a large num-
the economic crisis of the late 1980s. Tax  ber of taxes coupledwith extensive exemp-  impressive results
revenue dropped from 14 percent of GDP  tions and incentives. The reforms aimed
in 1978 to 9 percent in 1988. Frequent orga-  at streamlining and simplifying the system:
nizational restructurings did nothing to  income tax rates were reduced, exemptions
improve performance.                   were eliminated, and the sales tax was
In this context serious attention was given  replaced by a value added tax.
to radically reforming-even recreating-  The administrative reforms rested on a
the tax administration. Building on the legal  few key pillars. First, SUNAT's personnel
framework established by his predecessor,  system was exempted from civil service reg-
President Alberto Fujimori decided to pio-  ulations and allowed to operate along
neer the concept of a semiautonomous rev-  private sector lines. Second, SUNAT's super-
enue authority, the first in Latin America.  intendent became a presidential appointee,
The revenue authority's core reform team,  reporting directly to the president on mat-
which did not include any tax administra-  ters of import. Third, SUNAT's budget was
tion experts, was seconded from the central  set at 2 percent of collections, and the funds
bank and brought with it an appreciation  were automatically deposited in the agency's
of the importance of professionalism and  accounts. These features were intended to
bureaucratic autonomy.                 empower management while insulating it
The reforms were remarkably success-  from political interference, imbue staff with
ful: by 1997 internal tax revenue had recov-  professionalism and integrity, and ensure
ered to 13 percent of GDP-despite an   the timely and predictable provision of bud-
extremely difficult political and economic  get resources.
environment-and 90 percent of large cor-  The reforms also forged a new relation-
porate taxpayers surveyed believed that tax-  ship between taxpayers and the tax agency.
payer services had improved. The reforms  SUNAT pledged to treat all taxpayers fairly
FROM THE DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS VICE PRESIDENCY AND POVERTY REDUCTION AND ECONOMIC MANAGEMENT NETWORK


and committed to improving services. At  ing for a generous voluntary retirement pro-
the same time, the agency made clear its  gram and 430 failing the exam.
intention to enforce compliance with the  The final step was to recruit about 1,000
tax code. SUNAT communicated its "new   new staff members through a rigorous selec-
deal" to taxpayers through a sophisticated  tion process at Peru's most elite private uni-
public relations campaign. The agency's  versities, bringing the number of employees
new managers understood the importance  to the needed 2,000. The staff replacement
of earning public support for reforms, and  program was not cheap: costs exceeded $2.3
this support was cultivated through better  million. SUNAT financed part of the initial
services-delivered through service centers  reforms with resources set aside in 1988 for
located throughout Peru-and honest     that purpose. Given the results, however,
administration. In turn, the public's inter-  the investment in personnel reform proved
Financiat and     est in SUNAT's work became a powerful  a small price to pay.
motivator for the agency's staff.         But the staff evaluation and replacement
administrative                                             program wasjust the beginning. The new
Improving human resources               management team recognized that a pro-
autonomy was       The reform team, led by Superintendent  fessional personnel system would be instru-
Manuel Estela, was convinced that the first  mental to the reform's success. As part of
cruciat   step in a serious reform program was to  SUNAT's autonomy, it was allowed to oper-
address personnel, given the problems of  ate under private sector labor laws, per-
overstaffing, low salaries, and low morale.  mitting the agency to design its own
Based on President Fujimori's 1991 execu-  personnel system. To boost morale and effi-
tive decree, which called for the reorgani-  ciency, SUNAT decided to pay salaries based
zation of SUNAT, the reform     team    on comparable employment in the private
developed a plan for a comprehensive staff  sector. As a result the average monthly salary
evaluation and replacement program.    jumped from $50 to $1,000. The new salary
SUNAT's managers were committed to   policy also included a provision to maintain
selecting and developing an honest, pro-  the competitiveness of SUNAT's salary struc-
fessional staff. As such all staff members,  ture relative to the private sector.
who were inherited from the previous
agency, were given the choice of either opt-  Ensuring financial autonomy
ing for voluntary retirement or applying for  To guarantee SUNAT's autonomy, a new
a position in the new SUNAT. Those who  financing mechanism   was designed-
applied were subject to a three-phase exam.  though not without some controversy.
The first phase consisted of a psychological  Despite serious concerns about the effect a
evaluation that focused on personality, intel-  special funding mechanism would have on
ligence, and moral judgment. The second  other public organizations, SUNAT's found-
phase evaluated knowledge, reasoning, and  ing law specified three basic sources of
professionalism. The third phase consisted  income: 2 percent of taxes collected by
of personal interviews. Additional infor-  SUNAT for the treasury, 25 percent of rev-
mation from third party sources, such as the  enues from auctions of taxpayer property,
public register and the general account-  and 0.2 percent of taxes administered by
ing office, was also used to evaluate the suit-  SUNAT but not constituting treasury rev-
ability of existing staff for employment in  enues. In one regard this funding mecha-
the new superintendency. Only those who  nism was much different from those later
satisfied all these requirements were rehired.  used in other Latin American countries: the
Despite strong resistance from the union  2 percent share of taxes collected by SUNAT
and staff, SUNAT managed to carry out the  was automatically deposited in the agency's
initiative, which sheared two-thirds of its  accounts, eliminating intervention by the
staff. The number of employees fell from  treasury. This approach proved to be an
3,025 to 991, with 1,604 staff members opt-  important source of financial stability.
PREMNOTE 60                                                                             NOVEMBER 2001


Avoiding political interference         eral factors, perhaps the most important of
SUNAT became one of the developing      which was a coupling of political leadership
world's few semiautonomous revenue      with managerial expertise. The impact of
authorities able to operate without undue  direct presidential support for the reform
political interference. This was mainly due  should not be understated. Moreover, man-
to the special interest President Fujimori  agement of the reform benefited from both
initially took in the agency's operations, as  a team of professionals with experience
rapid, substantial, and visible improvements  in an autonomous organization and tech-
in tax collection became a top priority for  nical expertise from external consultants
the Peruvian president. In no other coun-  with international experience.
try had a new autonomous revenue author-  Second, the comprehensive approach
ity received as much presidential support  contributed to the reform's success.
as in Peru.                             Reformers drafted a master plan that coor-  Political leadership
In addition, because President Fujimori  dinated reforms in tax administration and
did not face pressure from an established  tax policy. A reform committee was estab-  and managerial
political party to dispense patronage, he  lished to monitor progress weekly and
had less reason to interfere in SUNAT's per-  respond immediately to problems during  expertise explain
sonnel system. More than 97 percent of  implementation.
agency staff were hired according to meri-  Third, SUNAT's organizational design  much of SUNAT's
tocratic procedures; the rest were appointed  allowed for managerial flexibility on a host
by SUNAT's superintendent. The Peru case  of important issues from personnel to finan-  success
thus differs from many other developing  cial administration. SUNAT's financial and
countries, where the tax administration is  administrative autonomy was instrumen-
regarded as a prime source of patronage.  tal in allowing management to establish a
At the same time, tax administrations sit  merit-based personnel system and secure
squarely in the political economy nexus of  adequate, predictable funding. The revenue
state-civil society relations, and SUNAT is no  authority model worked well in the Peru-
exception. The reform generated conflict  vian context because it empowered profes-
over tax policy because the agency became  sional managers to carry out far-reaching
heavily involved in policymaking-for exam-  efficiency and integrity-enhancing reforms
ple, it played a large role in drafting the value  while maintaining accountability to the
added and reformed income tax laws. On  government.
one hand, SUNAT's involvement was partly  Fourth, despite resistance to radical per-
due to the fact that it had more sophisticated  sonnel reform, the vision of SUNAT's senior
analytical capacity than the Ministry of  managers prevailed: they created an orga-
Finance. On the other, it was due to SUNAT's  nization based on high ethical and profes-
interest in promoting technically based tax  sional standards, which they maintained by
policy reforms. Tensions between SUNAT  fostering an organizational culture based
and the ministry came to light when, start-  on a sense of dedication to the agency's
ing in 1995, Fujimori's interest in SUNAT  mission.
waned. As a result SUNAT lost influence over  Fifth, SUNAT's strategy of coupling its
tax policy, which led to the undermining  fight against tax evasion with better taxpayer
of policymaking by political considerations.  services enabled itto develop a constituency
of supporters in the business community.
A model for an autonomous               Many of Peru's large corporate taxpayers
revenue agency?                         respected and valued SUNAT's work, giv-
SUNAT's experience offers several lessons  ing the agency some protection from polit-
for tax administration reform in other  ical interference.
countries. First, the immediate efficacy of  But Peru's experience also highlights pit-
SUNAT as a semiautonomous revenue       falls to avoid for other countries engaging
authority was due to a combination of sev-  in tax administration reform. One is that
PREMNOTE 60                                                                             NOVEMBER 2001


the relationship between the tax agency and  ity, it underscores the need for long-term
the ministry of finance should be carefully  political support to ensure sustainability.
managed. In Peru this relationship has been  Autonomy alone may be insufficient to safe-
strained and at times conflictual. The     guard against political interference while
absence of a clear division of labor on tax  maintaining integrity and professionalism.
policy and sharp differences in organiza-
tional cultures contributed to the tension  Further reading
between the two organizations.             Estela, Manuel. 2000. "Strengthening the
Sustainability is another aspect of revenue  Integrity of a Tax Collection Agency: The
authority reform that merits careful atten-  Case of SUNAT in Peru." Paper prepared
tion. Despite SUNAT's initial success, sev-  for a World Bank-Inter-American Devel-
eral problems have emerged. First, tax policy  opment Bank seminar on "Radical solu-
Tax administration      has been undermined by a series of tax       tions for fighting corruption in the public
exemptions, amnesties, and loopholes, espe-  sector," 2-3 November, Washington, D.C.
reform  cannot occur      cially in the income tax. The deterioration  Taliercio, Robert. 2000. "Administrative
of tax policy has had negative consequences  Reform as Credible Commitment: The
in a vacuum      for SUNAT, which finds it increasingly dif-  Link between Revenue Authority Auton-
ficult to collect taxes fairly and efficiently.  omy and Performance in Latin America."
Second, several well-publicized cases of polit-  Paper prepared for the annual meeting
ical persecution based on the misuse of con-  of the American Political Science Asso-
fidential tax information have led to the    ciation, 31 August-3 September, Wash-
belief that SUNAT has been infiltrated by    ington, D.C.
political operatives, though recent politi-
cal change offers hope for the agency's long-  This note was produced by the World Bank's Tax
term  prospects. Third, just as the tax    Policy and Administration Thematic Group in
administration requires good tax policy and  cooperation with the Inter-American Development
political support to function effectively, it  Bank'sFiscalDivision. It was written by Robert
also depends on the greater institutional  Taliercio (Young Professional, PREM Sector Unit,
environment. SUNAT's effectiveness has    East Asia and Pacific Region) and Michael
been limited by the weaknesses of other    Engelschalk (Senior Public Sector Specialist, Pub-
institutions-notably the judiciary and the  lic Sector Management Division, PREM Network)
police. For all these reasons, SUNAT has suf-  and is partly based on Estela (2000).
fered a loss of standing in public opinion.  Ifyou are interested in similar topics, consider
The Peru case shows that tax adminis-   joining the Tax Policy and Administration
tration reform cannot occur in a vacuum.   Thematic Group. Contact Michael Enge1schalk
And while SUNAT's success makes a strong   (x87764) or click on Thematic Groups on
case for a semiautonomous revenue author-  PREMnet.
This note series is intended to summarize good practice and key policy find-
Iings on PREM-related topics. The views expressed in these notes are those of
the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the World Bank. PREM-
notes are distributed widely to Bank staff and are also available on the PREM
website (http://prem). If you are interested in writing a PREMnote, email your
idea to Sarah Nedolast. For additional copies of this PPEMnote please contact
PeyReducionandE[csnamictManagement the PMEMa Advisory Service at x87736.
Prepared for World Bank staff