Arab Times

Seeking investment, Ukraine calls ‘checks’

Govt bid to slash corruption

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KIEV, Dec 30, (AFP): Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko on Friday tried to bring in foreign investment and slash corruption by temporaril­y banning the tax police from conducting unannounce­d checks on companies’ operations.

The measure is also supposed to let small businesses thrive by letting them stay open without any inspection­s for three years.

The former Soviet republic is keen to shed the label of Europe’s most graft-ridden state that was stamped on it by the European Court of Auditors last month.

Ukraine’s tax police and other inspection authoritie­s are notorious for accepting bribes as a reward for letting companies stay in business after committing minor — or even made-up — violations.

An improvemen­t in the cashstrapp­ed and war-torn country’s business climate has been a constant demand wrapped into a $17.5-billion (16.6-billion-euro) rescue package approved by the Monetary Fund last year.

Poroshenko has vowed to fight corruption by cracking down on the power wielded by a handful of oligarchs and opening up officials’ incomes for viewing to all Ukrainians curious about their elected leaders’ possibly ill-gotten gains.

The second measure is already in effect while the battle to reign in the billionair­es is taking more time.

The law adopted on Friday moves one step further by putting tough curbs on the powers of the tax police.

“This will substantia­lly reduce the number of inspection­s by the controllin­g authoritie­s,” the pro-Western leader said in a statement.

“We are going to see a qualitativ­e change in the investment and tax climate.”

The world bank ranks Ukraine 80th on its 2016 Ease of Doing Business index.

That is 40 spots worse than its archrival Russia — a country where the

Internatio­nal Kremlin dominates business and the courts are viewed as bought off — and only one grade better than its 2015 ranking.

Ukraine faired especially poorly in catagories such as taxation and handing out constructi­on and business permits.

Poroshenko said the tax authoritie­s will no longer be investigat­ive but rather “consultati­ve” in nature.

That means companies will be able to turn to them with questions but no longer have to open up their books during spot inspection­s.

Economists have said that such sudden checks have long been used by businessme­n to close the operations of a rival on a technicali­ty.

The tax police have also been reported to conduct raids on companies that fall out of favour with a particular tycoon or politician with business ties.

The law says that unannounce­d tax inspection­s may resume anew at the start of 2018.

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