"Impuestos en Centroamérica." . . "Amérique centrale" . . "Business." . . "Central America 1979- Politics and government." . . "POLITICAL SCIENCE General." . . "POLITICAL SCIENCE / General." . "POLITICAL SCIENCE / General" . "Steuersystem." . . "Midden-Amerika." . . "Países en vías de desarrollo." . . . . "Politieke systemen." . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "STATE-BUILDING AND TAX REGIMES IN CENTRAL AMERICA" . . . . . "Explores the politics of raising revenue from the most dynamic sectors of an economy as an expression of the relationship between state and society and the capacity of state institutions."@en . . "Electronic books"@en . . . "State-Building and Tax Regimes in Central America"@en . . . . . . . . . "\"In Central America, dynamic economic actors have inserted themselves into global markets. Elites atop these sectors attempt to advance a state-building project that will allow them to expand their activities and access political power, but they differ in their internal cohesion and their dominance with respect to other groups, especially previously constituted elites and popular sectors. Differences in resulting state-building patterns are expressed in the capacity to mobilize revenues from the most dynamic sectors in quantities sufficient to undertake public endeavors and in a relatively universal fashion across sectors. Historical, quantitative and qualitative detail on the five countries of Central America are followed by a focus on El Salvador, Honduras, and Guatemala. The greatest changes have occurred in El Salvador, and Honduras has made some advances, although they are almost as quickly reversed by incentives, exemptions and special arrangements for particular producers. Guatemala has raised revenues only marginally and failed to address problems of inequity across sectors and between rich and poor\"--"@en . "\"In Central America, dynamic economic actors have inserted themselves into global markets. Elites atop these sectors attempt to advance a state-building project that will allow them to expand their activities and access political power, but they differ in their internal cohesion and their dominance with respect to other groups, especially previously constituted elites and popular sectors. Differences in resulting state-building patterns are expressed in the capacity to mobilize revenues from the most dynamic sectors in quantities sufficient to undertake public endeavors and in a relatively universal fashion across sectors. Historical, quantitative and qualitative detail on the five countries of Central America are followed by a focus on El Salvador, Honduras, and Guatemala. The greatest changes have occurred in El Salvador, and Honduras has made some advances, although they are almost as quickly reversed by incentives, exemptions and special arrangements for particular producers. Guatemala has raised revenues only marginally and failed to address problems of inequity across sectors and between rich and poor\"--" . . "Electronic book" . . . . . . . . "State-building and tax regimes in Central America" . "State-building and tax regimes in Central America"@en . . . . . . . . . . "Entstehung." . . "Pensamiento político (Centroamérica)" . . "Central America" . . "Reconstruction d'une nation Amérique centrale." . . "University of Cambridge (Gran Bretaña)" . . "Nationenbildung." . . "Staat." . . "Política fiscal de Centroamérica." . . "Since 1979" . . "Belastingen." . . "Impôt Administration et procédure Amérique centrale." . .