Frankline Sunday
Young people starting small businesses will be allowed to operate for
seven years without paying taxes, if recommendations to the Building
Bridges Initiative are adopted.
According to the document, youth starting micro and medium-sized
enterprises will be
granted a tax holiday alongside other incentives to
expand business opportunities and innovation.
The report recommends “minimising taxation of new and small businesses
by giving them a tax holiday of at least seven years as a support to
youth entrepreneurship and job creation”.
SEE ALSO :Family faces Sh85m tax cheat charges
This
will be the first and largest tax incentive offered to entrepreneurs
and it comes in the wake of a massive revenue mobilisation drive by the
Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA), which has seen new taxes introduced that
have had a toll on young business men and women.
Currently, KRA is working on procuring a system that will install a
monitoring and payments system for income tax and Value Added Tax from
online businesses.
Treasury proposed the introduction of the Digital Tax in the Finance
Bill 2019 as one of the means of increasing revenue collection. This is
after they missed their target by Sh100 billion.
Members of the public who made submissions to the BBI team raised
concern over the taxation burden experienced by small businesses that
often deter entrepreneurship.
The BBI taskforce also recommended an advisory desk be set up at every
Huduma Centre, manned by a business development expert to help young
people start businesses.
SEE ALSO :Kamlesh Pattni company assets sell-off stopped
The
private sector has also been encouraged to form a national, non-profit
foundation to provide mentoring and support tools to aspiring business
owners between ages 18-35.
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