By JAMES ANYANZWA
In Summary
- The region’s finance ministers will meet next month meet to agree on a new Common External Tariff on products like sugar, maize, wheat and rice.
- The current CET is based on three bands of 25 per cent for finished goods, 10 per cent for intermediate goods and zero per cent for raw materials and capital goods.
- A limited number of products under the sensitive list attract rates above the maximum rate of 25 per cent.
New measures to protect local industries and farmers from
cheap imports will be known in June once the East African Community
partner states agree on taxation rates.
The region’s finance ministers will meet next month meet to
agree on a new Common External Tariff (CET) on products like sugar,
maize, wheat and rice, as well as customs-related taxation measures
designed to protect local industries from cheap imports and unfair
competition.
Kenya’s Cabinet Secretary for the National Treasury Henry Rotich
said taxation measures that will be agreed on by the EAC ministers for
finance will be communicated through the EAC Gazette Notice and
implemented from July 1.
“On matters relating to Customs, we have evaluated various
proposals from stakeholders for consideration by the EAC ministers for
finance during the pre-budget consultations meeting to be held in May
this year,” Mr Rotich told lawmakers in Nairobi while presenting the
country’s 2017/2018 budget.
The current CET is based on three bands of 25 per cent for
finished goods, 10 per cent for intermediate goods and zero per cent for
raw materials and capital goods, with a limited number of products
under the sensitive list, which attract rates above the maximum rate of
25 per cent.
The three-band tariff has been blamed for killing
competitiveness of local companies and obstructing intra-regional trade
by forcing them to pay duty at the rate of 25 per cent on some imported
inputs, which should have ordinarily attracted zero per cent or 10 per
cent duty. The EAC CET was last reviewed in 2010 but the three-band rate
was retained.
Hard hit sectors include soap, detergent, cement and
manufacturing, which are paying a higher duty of 25 per cent for some
finished products that end up being used as inputs qualifying for a
lower duty of either zero or 10 per cent.
Clinker, which is used in the manufacture of cement, is imported
as a finished product, attracting a 25 per cent duty but ends up being
used as an intermediate input, which should be subject to a 10 per cent
duty.
Palm oil, which is used to manufacture soap, is imported as a
finished product and subjected to a duty of 25 per cent yet the product
qualifies for a zero per cent duty.
Mr Rotich said the Customs-related taxation proposals seek to
promote industrialisation, protect local industries from cheap imports
and unfair competition and create incentives in the agricultural and
manufacturing sectors.
“The EAC Common External Tariff, which sets the rates of duty
applicable on imported goods, is undergoing a comprehensive review and
the outcome will be released once adopted by the EAC Council of
Ministers,” he said.
A group of 25 experts from Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda and
Burundi has been tasked with the mandate of revising the CET and
fine-tuning the existing rules of origin to enhance intra-EAC trade and
attract new investments in the bloc.
The experts will consider the list of sensitive goods and the
rates applicable on them and agree on the best method of classifying
such goods as maize, wheat, sugar, textile and rice whose industries
require protection from imports.
The proposed review of the EAC three-band tariff
could see excessive protection given to sensitive goods such as maize,
rice, wheat, textiles, sugar, milk and dairy products scrapped. A
uniform duty would be applied on the products to eradicate the frequent
applications for preferential treatment by some member states.
Kenya, for instance, requested a stay of application to apply 10
per cent duty on wheat grain instead of 35 per cent while Rwanda
requested a stay of application of $0.4 per kilogramme on worn articles
and $2.5 per kilogramme for worn clothing and $5 per kilogramme for worn
shoes.
This work was initially scheduled to be completed by July 1 but the timelines have since been changed to September 2017.
The position taken by other EAC member states is not yet clear, but Kenya has proposed that the tariff bands of the current CET be increased from three to four to take care of industries that import industrial inputs.
The position taken by other EAC member states is not yet clear, but Kenya has proposed that the tariff bands of the current CET be increased from three to four to take care of industries that import industrial inputs.
“The dynamics in the region have changed from the time the
current CET was formulated and therefore there is a need for the CET to
be reviewed to reflect the current realities in the region,” said Chris
Kiptoo, Kenya’s Principal Secretary in the department of Trade.
Other considerations include dropping some items from the basket
of sensitive goods and opening them up for competition from imports
outside the EAC.
A uniform duty could be applied on the remaining sensitive goods
to get rid of frequent applications for preferential treatment of these
products by some member states.
Tax experts however viewed Kenya’s 2017/2018 budget as cosmetic,
crafted to please the public during an election year and cast doubt on
the impact it will have on the economy.
“Overall the budget was fairly low key, which was to be expected
in an election year. Some of the measures announced may well be viewed
as electioneering measures but it remains to be seen if they have that
effect,” said Nikhil Hira, a tax leader at Deloitte East Africa.
“On the taxation front, as expected the measures were limited
given the time that Parliament has to pass them before it is dissolved.
Customs measures were not announced as the EAC Ministers of Finance are
yet to finalise them, which will be done in their gazette notice on
July 1,” said Mr Hira.
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