Tax Reform In Latin America: A Long-Term Assessment by Vito Tanzi published by Wilson Center (5/2013).
“Latin American taxation has been one of the enduring and continuing interests in my professional life, an interest that has stretched over a half a century. My first published papers on that topic were in the mid 1960s. My most recent ones were published recently. I also coedited a book on the topic for the IDB, published in 2008, which contained some of my own writing, and contributed the introductory chapter to another recent book on the same topic. See Bernardi et al. editors, 2008. In addition to this more “academic” work, I published two popular books, in 2007 and 2010, on Latin American countries. Both contain several references to and observations on taxes in several Latin American countries. See references.
Over the last five decades I participated in many tax conferences and tax missions to Latin American countries that ranged from large ones, such as Argentina, Brazil, and Mexico, to smaller ones, such as Peru, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Haiti, and Jamaica. Because of these activities, I feel that I can claim more than a passing interest, or knowledge, of Latin American taxation…”