By CHARLES MWANIKI
In Summary
- Treasury CS Henry Rotich in the 2017/18 Budget statement yesterday said the fat cats wishing to enjoy the tax amnesty should file their returns by June 30, 2018.
- Tax experts had earlier pointed to this as a grey area in the set of regulations that the KRA set out on March 9.
- The government is eying the more than £1 billion (Sh124 billion) looted from Kenyan taxpayers during President Moi’s reign.
Wealthy Kenyans who have stashed wealth abroad have an
additional six months to file returns on the assets and return them to
Kenya.
Treasury Cabinet Secretary Henry Rotich in the 2017/18 Budget
statement Thursday said the fat cats wishing to enjoy the tax amnesty
should file their returns by June 30, 2018. The previous deadline was
the end of this year.
The announcement will in effect send the Kenya Revenue Authority
(KRA) back to the drawing board to craft new regulations on the
amnesty, with the taxman having just issued guidelines on the same
earlier this month.
“Taxpayers willing to enjoy amnesty should declare the income
for 2016, file returns and accounts the year by June 30, 2018 and
transfer back to Kenya the funds voluntarily declared under the amnesty.
I expect KRA to issue guidelines on the same and urge taxpayers to cash
in on this amnesty and clean up their records with the KRA,” said Mr
Rotich.
The taxman is also expected to provide further clarification on
the treatment of immovable assets such as real estate, plant and
machinery, stating whether one would be forced to sell such an asset and
repatriate the proceeds in order to enjoy the amnesty.
Grey area
Tax experts had earlier pointed to this as a grey area in the set of regulations that the KRA set out on March 9.
“There is lack of clarity in the guidelines on how this will
actually work particularly in respect of real estate assets and indeed
any liabilities which affect these assets like a mortgage over an
overseas property. Other countries, which have required repatriation as
part of an amnesty have given periods of two to three years to allow
repatriation,” said Daniel Ngumy, a tax partner at Anjarwalla &
Khanna Advocates in an email.
The government is eyeing the more than £1 billion looted from
Kenyan taxpayers during President Moi’s reign and stashed in offshore
bank accounts and prime real estate overseas according to a forensic
study by Kroll Associates.
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