Summary
- The Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) has regained powers to seek workers’ and businesses’ financial transactions from third parties like banks, mobile telephone firms and schools in an effort to crack down on tax cheats.
- The Court of Appeal has reinstated sections of the law, which were frozen in 2018, allowing KRA to get information from third parties on persons or firms suspected to be tax cheats.
- The court ruling issued last week compels firms like Safaricom to share M-Pesa records with KRA, schools to share fees payment records with the taxman and for banks to share clients’ data.
The Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) has regained powers to seek
workers’ and businesses’ financial transactions from third parties like
banks, mobile telephone firms and schools in an effort to crack down on
tax cheats.
The Court of Appeal has reinstated sections
of the law, which were frozen in 2018, allowing KRA to get information
from third parties on persons or firms suspected to be tax cheats.
The
court ruling issued last week compels firms like Safaricom to share
M-Pesa records with KRA, schools to share fees payment records with the
taxman and for banks to share clients’ data.
The
restored Section 60 of the Tax Procedures Act compels all such third
parties to share information with the taxman. Those that defy KRA’s
orders will be liable to a fine of Sh1 million or a jail term of three
years or both should they fail to provide details to the taxman.
KRA
is seeking to match data from the third parties capturing flow of cash
against tax remittances in the race to nab those evading duty payments.
Paul Matuku, KRA’s Commissioner for Legal Services, said the
courts have opened the way for the authority to seek records from third
parties as well as to search and seize documents from suspected tax
cheats
“KRA could not interrogate or question the
correctness of tax or duty declaration using third party data further
than what had been declared by the taxpayer in the self-declaration
form,” Mr Matuku told the Business Daily in reference to the frozen law.
“It
meant that KRA could not seek for documents or information to confirm
the veracity of what has been filed in the self-assessment
declarations.”
In May 2018, Justice George Odunga had
declared sections 44(1) and (2), 60(1) and (3) and 59(4) of the Tax
Procedures Act, 2015, unconstitutional.
This made it possible for suspected tax cheats to challenge records obtained from third parties in court suits.
In
the appeal against Justice Odunga’s ruling, KRA said the decision had
crippled its mandate and derailed it from hitting its tax collection
targets.
Banks now form a key plank in KRA’s latest
approach that emphasises on data gathering from third parties like the
motor vehicle registration unit, property approval agency and Kenya
Power in the war against tax evasion.
The information
sought includes account balances and flow of income. This enables
authorities to check whether taxpayers have correctly declared their
income.
KRA detectives have identified wealthy
individuals and companies that owe it an estimated Sh250 billion in what
promises to be the biggest crackdown on high net-worth individuals and
entities.
The taxman’s intelligence and strategic
operations unit, which has a team of about 100 investigators, has in
recent months been investigating rich people’s sources of income and
expenditure against their tax remittances.
It
has also been analysing companies’ financial dealings, especially firms
doing business with the government and counties, to nab tax cheats by
matching their payments and incomes declared to KRA.
The
KRA enforcement unit has been using various databases to pursue
suspected tax cheats, including bank statements, import records, motor
vehicle registration details, Kenya Power records, water bills and data
from the Kenya Civil Aviation Authority (KCCA), which reveals
individuals who own aircraft.
Car registration details
are also being used to smoke out individuals who own high-end vehicles
but have little to show in terms of remitted taxes.
Kenya
Power meter registrations are helping the taxman to identify landlords,
some of who have been slapped with huge tax demands.
KRA
says a sharp increase in imports of the luxury goods and
multi-million-shilling investments in real estate have opened its eyes
to a potentially massive tax leakage, which if tapped could yield
billions of shillings in additional revenues to the Exchequer.
The
taxman is racing to bring more people into the tax brackets and curb
tax cheats and duty evasion in the quest to meet revenue targets that
KRA has persistently missed in recent years.
This year,
the economic slowdown in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic and tax cuts
imposed to protect the economy against the effects of the disease is
expected to hit tax collection hard.
The proposed
income and corporate tax cuts aimed at protecting the economy against
the effects of the coronavirus pandemic will cost KRA Sh1.3 billion
daily over the next three months, Parliament’s budget office has warned.
The
Parliamentary Budget Office (PBO) has now warned that lower revenue
collection will compromise the State’s ability to deal with emergencies
given that civil servants’ salaries, debt repayments 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.
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