
We analyse the impact of local public infrastructure on tax compliance, leveraging a large public investment experiment and property tax records.
Access
Can the provision of public goods strengthen the fiscal capacity of governments in developing countries and move them toward an equilibrium of widespread tax compliance? The authors present evidence of the impact of local public infrastructure on tax compliance, leveraging a large public investment experiment and individual property tax records from Mexico City. Despite the salience and large effects of these investments on access to infrastructure, property values, and local economic development, the authors find no changes in property tax compliance and can rule out even small increases. These null effects persist even when taxpayers are reminded about the tax-benefit link.
Authors

Research Fellow World Bank
Anne is the Research Fellow at IFS and an honorary faculty member at UCL. Her work focuses on tax policy in lower-income countries.

Associate Professor Duke University

The Edward B. Rust Professor Stanford Graduate School of Business
Juan Carlos Suárez Serrato is a Professor of Economics at the Stanford Graduate School of Business.
Working Paper details
- DOI
- 10.3386/w32776
- Publisher
- National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)
Suggested citation
A, Brockmeyer and F, Garfias and J, Suarez Serrato. (2024). The fiscal contract up close: Experimental evidence from Mexico City. London: National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER). Available at: https://ifs.org.uk/publications/fiscal-contract-close-experimental-evidence-mexico-city (accessed: 14 July 2026).
Grant
More from IFS
Understand this issue

The tough fiscal reality facing the UK government
Britain faces high debt, high borrowing costs, rising taxes and stretched public services. We explain the fiscal reality facing any government.
28 May 2026

The Spring Forecast explained
Spring Forecast: headline numbers look steady but higher energy prices could lift UK inflation, rates and borrowing faster than expected.
4 March 2026

The Autumn Budget 2025 explained
From tax rises to new spending pressures, we break down the major decisions in a packed Autumn Budget and what they mean for the UK.
27 November 2025
Policy analysis

Ethiopia’s tax-to-GDP ratio: benchmark estimation and performance analysis
This report provides a detailed analysis of Ethiopia’s tax-to-GDP ratio potential and the factors behind Ethiopia’s low tax-to-GDP ratio.
15 August 2025

New Welsh Government will face big fiscal challenges as it seeks to implement its policy priorities
The new Plaid Cymru government faces a difficult fiscal outlook – and the need to find common ground with other parties.
19 May 2026

None of Scotland’s parties has fully faced up to the fiscal reality facing the next Scottish Government
All parties’ plans would add to the fiscal challenges facing the next Scottish Government – albeit to very different extents
27 April 2026
Academic research

The cost of bureaucratic fragmentation: business tax evasion and revenue mobilization in a low-income country
We provide novel evidence on bureaucratic fragmentation and weak tax administrations as enablers of low revenue mobilization in low-income countries.
27 May 2026

Discretion versus algorithms: bureaucrats, tax equity and acceptability
We study how replacing bureaucrats’ discretion with algorithmic assessment affects the accuracy, equity, and public acceptance of tax decisions.
11 May 2026

Fiscal policy and the justice system
It is axiomatic that public funding is a determinant of the quality of the justice system and that justice is a consequential area of public spending.
8 May 2026