THISDAY

Museveni, Fowler, Tax Experts Speak on Africa’s Revenue Future

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President Youweri Kaguta Museveni of Uganda, Mr Tunde Fowler and Logan Wort, Chairman and Executive Secretary, respective­ly of the African Tax Administra­tion Forum (ATAF), have shared the thoughts on how Africa can increase its revenue yields gain freedom from dependence on foreign aids, loans and handouts.

The trio spoke yesterday in Kampala, the Ugandan capital, during the fourth Internatio­nal Conference of Tax in Africa.

Speaking at the conference, which was attended by over 500 taxation specialist­s, Museveni called for an end to the taxation of production. The Ugandan leader urged African countries to tax consumptio­n, property pay and greater attention to integrity in recruiting tax agencies’ staff.

On his part, Fowler called on

African countries focus more on how to stem Illicit Foreign Flows (IFF), taxing rights of African consumers of goods produced in different parts of the world as well as tracking such transactio­ns online and paying sustained attention to expanding the capacity of tax authority staff towards curtailing financial haemorrhag­ing.

Fowler, who is also Chairman of the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) and Joint Tax Board (JTB), also called for support from African leaders on how to influence, global discussion­s through policy formulatio­n, technical inputs and how the continent can navigate new technologi­es to increase efficiency in tax administra­tion.

Wort, ATAF’s Executive Secretary, noted that Africa will continue to lose huge slices of the revenue if it fails to pay attention to over 139 million Facebook and 500 million mobile phone users as well as online transactio­ns, which are estimated to contribute $110 billion to the continent’s GDP next year.

The trio and a Professor Anne Ogutu of the African Tax Institute, who spoke on the challenges of taxing the digital economy. They warned that in a world in which the economy is no longer obeying the tax rule of where you reside as a basis for levying tax, one in which consumers and, at times, taxpayers and businessme­n are stateless, there has to be a radical review of tax policy and practice in Africa. Otherwise, they said, the continent will miss out on the revenue from the global digital economy.

“We should know what to tax and why. I don’t support taxation of production. The point is that if production is not taxed, people will have more money in their pockets to spend. I know that if Ugandans have money in their pockets, in the evening or at weekend, they will go and relax. You can then collect tax when they go and take some drinks,” Museveni said.

He disagreed with his Minister of Finance, Matia Kasaija, that those carrying out electronic transactio­n or even cryptocurr­ency cannot be traced.

“It is not difficult to trace electronic transactio­n. When you do any transactio­n, you leave some traces. Once you go electronic, it is very easy to trace you. If you don’t want to be traced, you better don’t go electronic,” said the Ugandan President.

He urged tax practition­ers to determine how Africa can harness the footprints which exist online for tax purposes.

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