Picture this: you are a small-scale retail trader selling your
merchandise in a market where garbage has remained uncollected for as
long as you can remember.
The market taps have been dry for days on end and the toilets are filthy.
But you still pay daily fees to the municipal council or county government in the hope that they will provide these critical services to you.
But you still pay daily fees to the municipal council or county government in the hope that they will provide these critical services to you.
On the other hand, you pay the regressive value added tax (VAT) on many of the goods and services that you purchase.
At
home, as the woman of the house you carry out household chores, help
your ill mother-in-law and look after the whole family, all as unpaid
care work.
Tax avoidance
Meanwhile,
a large corporation in your neighbourhood employs accountants and
lawyers to help it avoid paying its fair share of taxes in the country.
The company also receives other State subsidies, along with
access to an educated workforce, good infrastructure and justice and
security services.
This scenario replicates itself daily in the lives of many women across the world, especially in the global south.
This, despite commitments by world leaders to increase gender equality and women’s economic empowerment by 2030.
It
is in this context that the first ever global convening on tax justice
for women’s rights was held earlier this year in Bogota, Colombia.
Inequality
The
meeting drew together a global community of women as a united voice to
advance tax justice as the most effective solution to gendered economic
inequality.
A diverse international movement is
building to address the denial of women’s human rights as regressive tax
systems continue to increase.
These continue to impoverish and marginalise women in the global economy.
Democratic states rely on tax revenues as the main source of funding to meet the needs and rights of citizens.
Yet,
regressive consumption taxes such as the value added tax – which hurt
poor people -- are increasingly being used to fill in for tax cuts that
benefit wealthy persons and corporations.
Without sufficient tax revenues, governments are unable to fund universal public education, health, water and other services.
Women rights
If this is met, then it protects the fundamental economic and social rights of women.
On
December 7 this year, the Bogota Declaration on Tax Justice for Women’s
Rights was launched. Organisations around the world are already signing
it.
This declaration calls on governments to implement
progressive tax policies to deliver on their human rights obligations
to citizens, especially to women and girls.
This
includes creating gender-responsive fiscal systems, ensuring
corporations and wealthy individuals pay their share of taxes, and that
all countries have a seat at the table to decide international tax
policies through a UN global tax commission.
---The author is the Campaigns and Policy Coordinator, Africa Global Alliance for Tax Justice (GATJ
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