Summary
- The proposed income and corporate tax cuts aimed at protecting the economy against the effects of the coronavirus pandemic will cost the Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) Sh1.3 billion daily over the next three months, Parliament’s budget office has warned.
- The Parliamentary Budget Office (PBO) — the unit which advises lawmakers on financial, budgetary and economic matters — said revenue collection will drop by Sh122.2 billion between April and June if lawmakers adopt the tax cuts.
- Parliament was to convene yesterday to debate the proposals but the debate was put off over coronavirus fears.
The proposed income and corporate tax cuts aimed at protecting
the economy against the effects of the coronavirus pandemic will cost
the Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) Sh1.3 billion daily over the next
three months, Parliament’s budget office has warned.
The
Parliamentary Budget Office (PBO) — the unit which advises lawmakers on
financial, budgetary and economic matters — said revenue collection
will drop by Sh122.2 billion between April and June if lawmakers adopt
the tax cuts.
Parliament was to convene yesterday to debate the proposals but the debate was put off over coronavirus fears.
Now,
the budget office has warned that the lower revenue collection will
compromise the State’s ability to deal with emergencies given that civil
servants’ salaries, debt payments and allocation to counties already
eat up 94 percent of government revenue.
Government
spending on development projects like roads, power plants and water
infrastructure will be reduced too, further hurting the economy given
that State spending puts money in the pockets of workers as well as
private firms linked to infrastructure works.
This will in turn affect suppliers and subcontractors down the value chain.
The
reduced revenue will leave little room for maneuvre and with expected
revenue underperformance, the country does not have much by way of
available resources to cater for emergencies, PBO has said in its report
to lawmakers ahead of the debate on Tax Laws (Amendment) Bill 2020.
“National
savings are not adequate,” the report warns. “As a result, the country
is not financially in a position to offer an elaborate stimulus package
as other countries have done.”
About 23 percent of
government revenue was already earmarked for repayment of public debt,
which has ballooned in recent years, while 71 percent had been allocated
for recurrent spending and allocation to counties.
Treasury
has reduced Value-Added Tax (VAT) from 16 to 14 percent and has
proposed that corporation tax be reduced from 30 to 25 percent under the
plans scheduled to come into force this month once approved by
Parliament.
The raft of tax changes are geared at
lowering the cost of basic goods while providing workers with additional
income for spending to boost consumption and sales of traders.
Lower
taxes are also expected to increase tax compliance. However, the PBO
has advised MPs that the cuts will hurt tax collection, prompting the
need for the government to borrow more in what will further add to the
already large public debt.
For instance, the PBO says
the proposed 100 percent tax relief for workers earnings up to Sh24,000
will leave a Sh19.84 billion hole for the remainder of the financial
year until June if the measures, yet to be debated and approved by
lawmakers, are backdated to April.
Reduction of
pay-as-you-earn (PAYE) tax for top-bracket workers (those earning from
Sh57,333 and above) to from 30 to 25 percent will cost the Exchequer
another Sh7.08 billion, while reduced corporation tax is estimated at
Sh45.69 billion in three months.
The biggest revenue
loss will, however, comes from reduced VAT, which was enforced on April
1, setting back State revenues by Sh49.6 billion. Revenue collection is
also likely to take a bigger beating should more businesses, especially
those in the crucial services sector, shut down as health authorities
tighten the sanitary measures to stem the spread of the
death-threatening coronavirus.
Already, tourist hotels
have closed down while restaurants are operating at below capacity.
Airlines like Jambojet have also halted all flights, meaning that taxes
from ticket sales in the industry will generally decline.
Restrictions
imposed on businesses like schools and colleges, retail outlets and
entertainment spots will also hurt sales as well as jobs and further
erode opportunities for tax collections.
The Markit
Stanbic Bank Kenya Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) for manufacturing
and services fell to 37.5 in March from 49.0 in February. Readings above
50.0 signals growth in business.
Kenya’s readings
already indicate that businesses are not doing well, meaning that the
readings for April are likely to be much lower compared to March.
“Kenyan
firms saw a marked drop in business activity during the month, which
was widely linked to the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on consumer
demand,” the Stanbic said in its report.
‘’Businesses
consequently reduced activity and employment, while demand for inputs
fell at the quickest pace since late-2017.” The budget office has
already indicated that slugging tax collections has made it difficult
for the State to unveil an expenditure-driven stimulus package akin to
bailouts in the developed world, including offering a financial package
to struggling business and workers being laid off due to the pandemic
that has left 1.3 million people infected and over 77,000 dead.
On the brighter side, over 294,000 have recovered after being infected, signaling optimism that the pandemic can be contained.
To
mitigate against the adverse effects of the virus in Kenya, the budget
office has asked the Treasury to borrow Sh150 billion to offer emergency
bailouts to the hardest-hit sectors such as aviation, tourism and
horticulture as well as offer social support to the poor and vulnerable.
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