The taxman has been dealt a blow after a committee of the
National Assembly recommended that Value Added Tax Regulations, 2017, be
annulled in their entirety as they violate the law.
The
Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) has for the last two years been
collecting 16 per cent VAT on all goods and services produced in Kenya
for the international market on the basis of the regulations, which
National Treasury CS Henry Rotich published in March 2017.
As
a result, KRA is holding in excess of Sh20 billion accrued from
exporters as outstanding VAT tax refunds in the last two years.
However,
the committee on Delegated Legislation has adjudged the levies as
illegal and wants the taxman to surrender the funds to the owners
because the implementation of the regulations has no legal basis as they
were not approved by the National Assembly as required by law.
BACKLOG
Exporters
have complained that the implementation of the regulations has
increased backlog in VAT tax refunds as KRA forces them to obtain what
they say is unnecessary documentation which has negatively impacted the
manufacturing sector.
A report on the
regulations prepared by the committee, which is chaired by Uasin Gishu
Woman Rep Gladys Shollei, faults KRA for implementing the regulations
without the requisite approval.
The
committee further established that the regulations, which were to
operationalise the VAT Act of 2013, were not subjected to public
participation and that their implementation is onerous and a significant
handicap to the growth of the manufacturing and agricultural sectors.
REGULATIONS
“The
regulations have reversed gains Kenya has made in improving the ease of
doing business and are a major deterrent to prospective investors,” the
committee notes in its report.
While the law gives
Cabinet secretaries the power to make regulations, the same law mandates
the CSs to submit the regulations within seven days to the National
Assembly for scrutiny and approval before implementation. This was not
done but KRA went to start charging VAT for all exports.
When
he appeared before the committee on Tuesday last week, Mr Mohamed Omar,
KRA Commissioner in charge of Strategy, said the National Treasury
complied with the law and submitted the regulations to the House for
scrutiny as required. However, he didn’t provide proof of the claims.
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