The Kenya Airways Dreamliner B787 on touchdown at the Jomo Kenyatta
International Airport (JKIA) during the official reception in Nairobi on
April 5, 2014. Photo/SALATON NJAU
Parliament’s recent decision to impose value added tax on large aircraft has left national carrier Kenya Airways (KQ) with one of the largest tax bills ever for its planned purchase of Dreamliner jets.
Tax
experts say the airline could pay up to Sh14 billion in VAT for the six
Boeing 787 Dreamliners and a Boeing 777-300 ER expected to arrive
before the end of the year besides the one Dreamliner that was delivered
last month.
Each Dreamliner is priced at about Sh11
billion and paying 16 per cent VAT on the eight aircraft poses a new
challenge to the airline’s operations at a time it is struggling with
high fuel costs, a dip in passenger numbers on some routes due to
Kenya’s security concerns and stiff competition in the market.
The
new law particularly hurts Kenya Airways’ ability to effectively
compete with key rivals such as Ethiopian Airlines and Middle East
carriers, who are not carrying the extra cost that is likely to be
passed on to passengers in the form of pricier airline tickets
VAT EXEMPTED
“There
will be a huge negative impact since all KQ aircraft if purchased are
now taxable. Spares and engines are also taxable under this new legal
regime,” KQ said a statement, adding that the amendment “isn’t good news
for the business”.
Parliament last month introduced VAT on aeroplanes weighing more than 2,000 kilogrammes, removing the burden on operators of small aircraft as it shook up the operations of the large aircraft owners.
The
exempt aircraft account for about 46 per cent of the total Kenyan
registered fleet. Helicopters are not affected by the law and do not
attract VAT.
Tax experts say the change in law should
ordinarily have no impact on Kenya Airways’ finances because all VAT
payments are recoverable through the claims mechanism but the Kenya
Revenue Authority’s (KRA) huge refunds backlog means a huge amount of
the airline’s capital could be tied down with the taxman for years even
as it struggles to keep its operations afloat in a difficult business
environment.
USED BY THE RICH
“VAT
is recoverable from the KRA, but the problem is the delay in refunds.
It sometimes takes years before one gets back the money and this affects
cash flow,” said Rajesh Shah, a tax partner at PricewaterhouseCoopers
(PwC).
Kenya
Airways chief executive Titus Naikuni said the full impact of the tax
measure lies in the fact that the long delays may force the airline to
take on expensive debt to fill the financing gap.
“The
refunds take so long that we’re forced to borrow money to fill that
hole,” he said. Parliament rejected nearly a third of the items that
Suba MP John Mbadi wanted to be exempted from Vat to ease the high cost
of living burden on ordinary Kenyans.
The decision
left prices of many goods and services that increased after the
government introduced a 16 per cent charge on hundreds of consumer goods
last September unchanged.
The Kenya Air Operators
Association (KAAO), an industry lobby, said Parliament’s choosing to
cushion light aircraft owners that are mostly used by the rich for
private travel while taxing big operators like KQ who employ thousands
of people was discriminatory.
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