A fall in import tax collections in the
last nine months has raised eyebrows in East Africa, pushing national
revenue agencies to the overdrive as they seek to seal leakage loopholes
and increase efficiency.
All the East African
Community (EAC) states have missed their import duty collection targets
in the nine months to March with Kenya, the biggest of the economies,
recording Sh65.8 billion against an expectation of Sh70 billion.
Official
data shows that both the dry and wet cargo import volumes fell in the
nine months, causing a cumulative effect even on consumption taxes.
Following
a meeting in Burundi last week, tax bosses from Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda,
Tanzania, Burundi and South Sudan have agreed to implement a uniform
system for valuing imports.
This means that the customs
authorities in the EAC would use the same formula in determining the
value of goods coming into the bloc and by extension impose similar
duties.
“… the [commissioner generals] directed the
establishment of a common valuation approach in order to ensure
maximisation of revenue mobilisation opportunities through sealing
loopholes that permit cargo undervaluation,” said a communiqué released
after the meeting.
Common valuation is a requirement of
effective operation of a Customs Union. However, despite the existence
of a Common External Tariff, member states are yet to implement it.
This means the EAC members are currently playing into the hands of tax evaders by levying different absolute amounts.
The
countries also agreed to harmonise cargo scanning mechanisms to align
them with the Kenyan model. The Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA)
automatically flags goods from ‘suspicious source countries’ for
assessment by customs officers.
The taxmen pledged closer cooperation and co-ordination to boost revenue collection.
Already, Kenya, Uganda, and Rwanda are working together on a cargo tracking project.
Goods are monitored during transportation in the region to guard against cargo diversion, which results in tax revenue losses.
The
common platform had enabled the RAs (regional authorities) in the three
countries to effectively combat transit cargo diversion given the
platform’s capability to allow simultaneous tracking and real-time
communication between tracking and enforcement teams in different
countries,” said the communiqué.
The tax authorities
recommended the cargo tracking system be extended to South Sudan,
Tanzania and Burundi. They also approved the development of a common ICT
platform for customs management in the bloc.
The
meeting also touched on tax avoidance by corporates by exploiting gaps
in tax regulation and shifting income to low or no tax jurisdictions.
The
six countries vowed to join the Inclusive Framework, a grouping of more
than 100 nations under the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development (OECD) that are working to combat these tax avoidance
strategies, also known as base erosion and profit shifting.
“As
a first step, the [commissioners general] agreed to establish effective
structures to support international taxation within their [revenue
authorities] and to nurture the relevant expertise to help in
confronting the challenge,” said the communiqué.
Kenya is already a member of the OECD. The member countries monitor different legal frameworks to counter profit shifting.
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