Part,  Chapter, Paragraph

 1   II,     8.  2.  2|         payments, lost taxation revenue and the impaired quality
 2  III,    10.  2.  1|         correlation between the revenue from alcohol-specific taxes (
 3  III,    10.  2.  1|     taxes (as a % of government revenue or % of GDP) and per capita
 4  III,    10.  2.  1|     consumption and alcohol tax revenue~ ~Managing the sale of alcohol~ ~
 5   IV,    11.  1.  3|     Europe, varying in terms of revenue collection, pooling mechanisms
 6   IV,    11.  6.  1|        and the supply of public revenue for healthcare. Countries
 7   IV,    11.  6.  1|  shifting to private sources of revenue or increasing efficiency (
 8   IV,    11.  6.  2|        been efforts to increase revenue by broadening revenue bases
 9   IV,    11.  6.  2|  increase revenue by broadening revenue bases linked to the employed.
10   IV,    11.  6.  2|         closer link between the revenue generated and the amount
11   IV,    11.  6.  2|       tax rate yields differing revenue according to the wealth
12   IV,    11.  6.  2|       taxation draws on a broad revenue base and allows trade-offs
13   IV,    11.  6.  2|          Overall, the potential revenue raised by taxation is significant,
14   IV,    11.  6.  2|      unable to raise sufficient revenue (Thomson, Foubister and
15   IV,    11.  6.  2|         social health insurance revenue may be better protected
16   IV,    11.  6.  2|     political interference than revenue from taxation since an independent
17   IV,    11.  6.  2|        an independent system of revenue collection is at arm’s length
18   IV,    11.  6.  2|   responsibility for collecting revenue from the insurance funds (
19   IV,    11.  6.  2|         health insurance fundsrevenue less vulnerable to wage
20   IV,    11.  6.  2|     though the actual amount of revenue collected did not increase).
21   IV,    11.  6.  2|         supplementary source of revenue. This may in part be due
22   IV,    11.  6.  3|     both the progressiveness of revenue collection and the incidence
23   IV,    11.  6.  4|   paramount. In some cases, the revenue collection agents are also
24   IV,    11.  6.  4|         that may have different revenue bases and population risk
25   IV,    11.  6.  4|        and b) the size of their revenue base (incomes of the insured).
26   IV,    11.  6.  4|        income~Bulgaria~National Revenue Agency~National Revenue
27   IV,    11.  6.  4|         Revenue Agency~National Revenue Agency (central taxes)~National
28   IV,    11.  6.  4|         Ministry of Health (tax revenue), Municipalities (tax revenue)~
29   IV,    11.  6.  4|   revenue), Municipalities (tax revenue)~28 Regional Health Insurance
30   IV,    11.  6.  4|      Insurance Funds (insurance revenue).~ ~Insurance revenue: Age,
31   IV,    11.  6.  4| insurance revenue).~ ~Insurance revenue: Age, historical allocations,~
32   IV,    11.  6.  4|      local tax base)~England~HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC)~Department
33   IV,    11.  6.  4|       base)~Northern Ireland~HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC)~Department
34   IV,    11.  6.  4|    population risks~Scotland~HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC)~Department
35   IV,    11.  6.  4|   insurance funds~none~Wales~HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC)~Department
36   IV,    11.  6.  4|    possible means of generating revenue and containing costs through
37   IV,    11.  6.  4|        could collect additional revenue by offering the excluded
38   IV,    12.  2    |         correlation between the revenue from alcohol-specific taxes (
39   IV,    12.  2    |     taxes (as a % of government revenue or % of GDP) and per capita