If the world
economy is to prosper, governments around the globe need to deepen their
cooperation in managing global issues, including international
taxation. Cross-border tax avoidance and illicit
financial flows and the
divergence in tackling these and other challenges has cast global tax
cooperation into the limelight in the most notoriously controversial
manner imaginable.
Given that Tanzania
is a part of the flux world economy, this article considers how
Tanzania could tap into the global tax cooperation as it deals with
those issues.
The forums through
which Tanzania can cooperate with other countries on regional and
international tax issues include the East African Community (EAC); the
Southern African Development Cooperation (SADC); the Organisation for
Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD); the United Nations (UN)
Committee of Experts on International Cooperation in Tax Matters; and
the Intergovernmental Group of Twenty-Four on International Monetary
Affairs and Development (G-24).
The EAC and SADC
regional blocs have developed their own model tax treaties. As a member
of both blocs, Tanzania faces the challenge of having to coordinate
regional tax matters primarily through officials of the Tanzania Revenue
Authority, which mutually cooperates with other revenue authorities in
Africa through the African Tax Administration Forum (ATAF), which has
also developed its own model tax treaty.
The EAC, SADC and ATAF model tax treaties generally follow the OECD's and the UN's model tax conventions.
The majority of
regional and global tax issues and challenges entail political support
which is yet to fully embrace the full spectrum of cooperation on these
issues and challenges. However, illicit financial flows (IFFs) out of
Tanzania are a special case: IFFs have become a serious concern due to
their negative impact on Tanzania's development agenda.
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Tanzania should
utilise its 'wriggle room' within the EAC, SADC, ATAF and the African
Union to provide political support for more exacting standpoints on
global tax coordination within a regional and global context.
Globally, the OECD
provides stellar coordination on international taxation among its member
countries than any other international organisation. Although Tanzania
is not an OECD-member, the OECD's international tax rules have an effect
on Tanzania and other non-members.
Opportunities exist
for Tanzania and other African countries to reform these rules to their
benefit provided that they improve coordination amongst themselves.
Through its
Committee on Fiscal Affairs, the OECD is widening its reach beyond its
membership with initiatives such as promoting tax information exchange
and preventing base erosion and profit shifting (BEPS).
Indeed, two years
ago, Tanzania published its new Tax Administration (Transfer Pricing)
Regulations, 2018, which are largely consistent with the OECD transfer
pricing guidelines--developed as part of the BEPS Action Plan aimed at
tackling international tax avoidance by multinational companies.
But beyond these
initiatives, developing countries don't have the right to participate
directly in OECD's main global rules-setting agenda.
The UN Committee of
Experts on International Cooperation in Tax Matters ("the UN Committee
of Tax Experts") offers another opportunity in global tax cooperation
for Tanzania and other developing countries to seek together bigger
changes in international tax rules. The UN Committee of Tax Experts has a
generally more favourable picture of the creation of international
instruments that are advantageous to developing countries than the OECD.
Be that as it is,
Tanzania's strengthened cooperation at EAC, SADC and ATAF levels with
all relevant African member countries having shared interests will
provide one of the easiest ways to reaching more potentially effective
agreements. These agreements can be the "terminus a quo" for swaying the
results of international negotiations on taxation.
As a member of the
Group of 77 (G-77) at the UN, Tanzania should consider enhancing its
participation in discussions of the G-24 members, which has underscored
the importance of supporting the efforts of developing countries through
effective global tax cooperation.
Besides supporting
the work of the UN Committee of Tax Experts, the G-24 is able to work
more effectively with the OECD/G20 Inclusive Framework on BEPS to
curtail tax avoidance (a legal practice) that exploits gaps and
mismatches in countries' tax laws so as to avoid paying tax.
By working together
with other G-24 members, Tanzania and other developing countries will
be able to bring awareness to international taxation and development
policy issues of concern.
Finally, a
longstanding commitment by Tanzania to regional and global tax
cooperation calls for the need to adhere to the rule of law--a
fundamental pillar for human rights protection--and to embrace a free
market and greater economic freedom and transparency.
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