Faced with an increasingly critical citizenry, the Ugandan
government has slapped new taxes on social media platforms such as
WhatsApp, Facebook, Twitter, Skype and Viber to stop what President
Yoweri Museveni has called lugambo (gossip).
Mr
Museveni also targets commercial buildings to boost government revenue
from the Sh50 billion the taxman collects from landlords annually.
The
president criticised the “concealment” of taxes in housing sector as
“scandalous” and asked Finance Minister Matia Kasaija and his team to
get serious.
The new tax proposals
were castigated by social media users, human rights defenders and
opposition leaders as “diversionary, deceptive, injurious to individual
freedoms and burdensome”.
The new taxes were confirmed by Mr Kasaija, Secretary to Treasury Keith Muhakanizi and State House officials.
The
proposed tax measures that seek to help Mr Museveni’s government raise
between Sh400 billion and Sh1.4 trillion from social media users
annually were ordered by the president in a March 12 letter to Mr
Kasaija.
“I am not going to propose a
tax on internet use for educational, research or reference purposes...
these must remain free,” Mr Museveni wrote.
“However, olugambo on
social media (opinions, prejudices, insults, friendly chats) and
advertisements by Google and I do not know who else must pay tax because
we need resources to cope with the consequences of their lugambo.”
The president, however, did not explain how lugambo has affected resource mobilisation.
And
on the issue of the so-called “over-the-top” platforms (OTTs)— such as
WhatsApp, Skype Viber, Twitter, etc— Mr Museveni wrote:
“If
we were to introduce a small fee of Uganda Sh100 per day from sim-cards
that are used by these OTTs, that would generate about Sh400 billion
additional revenue.”
He further
explained that this estimate is on the basis of the minutes used by
Ugandans over OTT and that this does not include undeclared calls and
data by the telephone companies.
“These
could be in the magnitude of $400m per year. This is all to do with
airtime excise duty and tax on voice over OTT and phones (mobiles and
fixed),” he added.
Mr Kasaija, who
the president scolded for “lack of seriousness” in identifying tax
sources and collecting more taxes for the country, also confirmed the
disputed taxes measures.
Mr Kasaija,
however, explained that the orders in the president’s letter are “a
Cabinet directive” and that the details will be contained in the new tax
bills to Parliament.
In trying to
widen the tax base in the 2018/19 budget, Mr Museveni has proposed new
taxes on telephones data transmission and the housing sector, which he
says generates rented incomes but are not adequately taxed.
The details will be contained in the new tax bills.
Delving
into the details of the new tax proposals, the president added: “The
big losses on telephones are in three areas: not collecting excise duty
on airtime and only collecting VAT, missing many calls because you
depend on false declarations by telephone companies and not taxing voice
conversations and other non-educational communications over the
internet (via social media, whatsApp, Facebook etc). Why not put excise
duty on (internet) air time?”
Telecoms have reacted with consternation, rejected the tax proposals as uncalled for and grumble about “double taxation”.
MTN general manager of corporate service Anthony Katamba denied claims that telecom companies falsify declarations.
He told the Monitor that imposing excise duty on social media is taxing content.
“The
data you buy gives you internet. So taxing social media is a taxing
content,” Mr Katamba said, adding that if government goes ahead to
implement the proposed tax, “it would be unprecedented.”
On
taxation, Mr Katamba said: “URA assess us for tax based on the minutes
used, you cannot hide that. If you chose to under declare, how do you
gain by hiding the minutes? It’s not possible because MTN has to bill
another entity for the minutes.”
Citing
calls from Britain where MTN has to bill the British Telecom, Mr
Katamba asked, “If I under declare, then how will MTN get its money from
British Telecom.”
However, a senior
official from Uganda Telecom, who requested not to be named because he
or she is not authorised to speak to journalists, backed the president
and accused URA and Ministry of Finance officials of sleeping on the
job.
He said most Ugandans are busy making free calls off social media platforms such as Viber, Skype, Facebook and WhatsApp.
According
to this official, URA has allowed telecom companies to take home a
wider profit margin, denying government the billions of shillings needed
to finance the budget.
In asking URA
to widen its tax base, UTL sources indicated that URA charges excise
duty and VAT on voice calls yet the trend has changed— people are using
airtime more for data than voice calls.
Data
from URA show that telecoms pay 18 per cent VAT and 12 per cent excise
duty on airtime for voice calls but only VAT on data yet mobile phone
subscribers use more of data than voice.
The
telecoms also pay corporate tax, which is determined from the net
earnings and 2 per cent on gross earning to the regulator, the Uganda
Communications Commission (UCC).
However, both VAT and excise duty are passed on to the consumers.
In
lecturing government economists at Finance ministry on the principles
of taxation, President Museveni, who is a student of economics and
political science, invoked the equivalence of a shirt manufacturing
plant to justify the need to tax airtime for internet access and widen
the tax base, something his critics say has eluded his government for 32
years.
“When you manufacture a shirt
you pay excise duty at the factory level. When the shirt is eventually
sold, it also pays VAT, paid by the consumer. Whether the shirt is
bought or not, it will have paid the excise duty. Are your officials
aware of these principles of taxation?” he asked Mr Kasaija again.
Mr
Muhakanizi told Sunday Monitor that Mr Kasaija will table the new tax
measures in Parliament on Tuesday even as some lawmakers, such as Mr
Nandala Mafabi (Budadiri West), vowed to block what they ridiculed as
“WhatsApp tax”.
Some MPs, economists
and independent experts in the ICT sector accused the president of
“deepening the tax base” as opposed to widening it— a move they say
would balance the books on the backs of the poor.
Mr
Venansius Baryamureeba, the Vice Chancellor of Uganda Technology and
Management University and a former dean of Makerere University Faculty
of Computing and IT, asked the president to drop the proposed tax
measures in public interest, and instead cut taxes on smartphones and
make internet affordable to ease access to information.
Mr Julius Mukunda, the executive director of Civil Society Budget Advocacy Group explained:
“From
the point of view of pro-poor and progressive taxation, if you charge
Sh100 per day then everybody will pay but when you charge say 1 per
cent, it will be proportionally a way of expanding the tax base because
it will only be paid by the rich.”
He
added: “We can have the tax but how will it be collected? We rely on
telecom companies to collect tax. So we need to put in place an
infrastructure to help government to collect this tax. Currently nobody
knows how much money we collect from telecom companies.”
In
choosing new taxes against increased borrowing, the Finance minister,
according to sources, will tell Parliament next week how Cabinet took
the decision to widen the tax base in order to finance government
projects.
Instead of taxing Facebook and WhatsApp, some
of the MPs on the ICT and the Budget Committees of Parliament asked the
president and Mr Kasaija to focus on the fight against corruption and
other forms of financial indiscipline in governmentX
The
MPs have cited a 2016 survey by the procurement authority that revealed
the raging plunder of public resources through inflated procurement
deals and ranks key spenders such as Education and Defence ministries
among the worst thieving government agencies.
The
“performance results and corruption perceptions in public procurement”
survey carried out by the Public Procurement and Disposal of Public
Assets Authority blames corruption in procurement on “political meddling
in the procurement processes”, impunity and a decadent culture that
adores wealth accumulation.
In 2005,
the World Bank estimated that Uganda loses more than $300 million
through corruption and procurement malpractices every year.
No comments :
Post a Comment