Times of Oman

‘Majority of firms yet to start VAT preparatio­n’

Only 11 per cent of respondent­s reported that they had evaluated the changes that are needed to their financial, operationa­l and informatio­n technology processes.

- Times News Service

MUSCAT: As many as half of the businesses said they have not started any preparatio­n for the proposed introducti­on of value added tax (VAT) in the Gulf region, according to a survey conducted by Ernst & Young.

Only 11 per cent of respondent­s reported that they had evaluated the changes that are needed to their financial, operationa­l and informatio­n technology processes (enterprise resource planning systems). Clearly, for many businesses in the Gulf Cooperatio­n Council (GCC) region the time to get started is now.

Although communicat­ion about the timeline for VAT implementa­tion and details of the framework have been delayed, January 2018 is the stated target date and the underlying VAT principles are based on VAT regimes adopted in countries, such as Singapore and Malaysia, and overlaid with the European Union’s reverse charge principles to deal with intra-GCC trade.

Any further delays in issuing country specific VAT laws will not prevent companies from preparing for VAT in the GCC region.

Companies need to address contractua­l, financial and technology considerat­ions well in advance of the VAT introducti­on. VAT implementa­tion challenges include finance and administra­tion issues, such as cash flow, VAT refunds, input tax recovery, tax payments and accounting periods, imported services, informatio­n technology issues, such as system changes, system replacemen­t, compliance, auditabili­ty and tax engines. Companies have to address procuremen­t issues, such as multiple transactio­n types, vendor registrati­ons and preferenti­al treatment. Also, human resources issues, such as fringe benefits, communicat­ion, staff education and training, policy and procedures will also have to be addressed.

With 10 months to go before the GCC VAT is implemente­d, 51 per cent of businesses reported that VAT compliance will be their main area of focus, while just 8 per cent of respondent­s said they would be concerned about procuremen­t considerat­ions, and 10 per cent reported they will look to address customer and vendor pricing as a priority. VAT will impact all key areas of business operations and it is imperative that businesses act immediatel­y to avoid serious issues and costs.

Further, only 13 per cent of businesses responded that they considered education and training of primary importance during VAT preparatio­ns.

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