By Alawi Masare
The Citizen Reporter
The Citizen Reporter
Summary
The controversy covered the pension funds on withdrawal benefit and led to the departure of about 200 employees.
Dar es Salaam. Uncertainty in Tanzania’s fiscal policy is costing companies dearly, with African Barrick Gold (ABG) being the latest casualty.
hanges
in Value Added Tax (VAT) exemptions have cost the mining company a huge
amount in payments to the government. Part of that money has yet to be
refunded, according to a senior ABG official.
The firm’s vice
president in charge of corporate affairs, Mr Deo Mwanyika, said
yesterday that the on-and-off VAT special relief for mining companies
and other investors has left the company about $37 million poorer so far
due to government’s failure to refund the VAT.
The government
abolished the VAT exemptions to the mining companies in 2009 after an
agreement that they would pay the tax and get a refund later.
The
government then failed to refund about $120 million and re-introduced
the exemptions in 2010 after lobbying, having realised that clearing the
back payments would be an uphill task.
The government extended
the exemptions during the 2012/13 budget speech last June but the move
was overturned in the finance bill, abolishing the VAT special relief to
mining companies.
ABG says it has never received a refund of the
tax it pays since last year. Up to February this year, the company had
paid about $37 million that the government should pay back.
Mr
Mwanyika added: “The debt rises by $7 million to $8 million a month
depending on the things imported. It’s a big issue which is not only
affecting us but also destabilises the investment environment in the
country.”
Tanzania may be considered a stable nation in terms of
policies, he said, but the recent changes are disturbing and create an
atmosphere of uncertainty.
Mr Juma Mwapachu, the former East
African Community secretary-general and now a non-executive director of
ABG, said the impact of the mining sector should not only be measured by
looking at the withholding tax they pay but also consider other
contributions.
“We need to see the multiplier effects like the
corporate social responsibility expenditures, payments to Tanzania and
dividends given to shareholders,” said Ambassador Mwapachu.
Through
its Maendeleo Fund, for instance, ABG invested about Sh12 billion ($7.5
million) in over 50 projects since its launch in September 2011.
ABG’s
net income grew from $218 million in 2010 to $275 million in 2011 and
dropped sharply to $59 million in 2012. The decline in net income is
partly associated with the wiping out of the VAT exemption last year.
The
controversy covered the pension funds on withdrawal benefit and led to
the departure of about 200 employees. ABG’s operational expenditure rose
from $892 million in 2011 to $1.022 billion in 2012. Since 2010, the
firm has contributed a total of $150 million to Tanzania in net tax.
ABG
has also invested over $750 million in sustaining its asset base in the
past three years and it expects to invest a further $445 million in
2013 to sustain and expand its assets this year.The company faces
challenges that include unreliable power supply and developing and
retaining a skilled workforce.
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