The Pak Banker

New direct, indirect taxes to be imposed in UAE

-

A mix of new direct and indirect taxes will be levied in the UAE and GCC in the near to medium term because oil prices are expected to remain low, necessitat­ing the creation new sources of revenues to fund budgets, say tax experts. They said new taxes could be levied on wealth and property, as well as corporates, while income tax will also surely come but it will be introduced at the far end in the UAE and GCC. More importantl­y, new taxes will come in phases rather than being implemente­d in one go.

"Looking at the budgets and oil prices, GCC government­s will have to introduce new taxes but they cannot bundle it in one go. They have to break down slowly. For example, in Kuwait, they mentioned about corporate tax and then on the far end it will be income tax," said Dr Rasheed Al Qenae, head of tax at KPMG Middle East and South Asia and managing partner at KPMG Kuwait.

He said the GCC region is at the elementary stage of tax education and the government­s will have to look at other sources of funds. "In 10 years, we expect wealth, property and asset taxes can be levied in the region because it is not that the government­s want to impose but because they will have to. They will come gradually and take time. Now government­s are focused on introducin­g value-added tax across region. Once that is stabilised, they will think about others," Al Qenae said in an interview with Khaleej Times.

He said luxury tax could be also be introduced in the medium term.

"First it is going to be VAT and then on top of that will be luxury tax. This is very clear in developed markets and it is called luxury tax," he said, adding that the contributi­on of taxes to the GCC budget will substantia­lly increase in the next five to 10 years. The UAE, Saudi Arabia and Bahrain has levied 5 per cent

VAT on goods and services. The UAE has also levied 100 per cent tax on tobacco and energy drink and 50 per cent on carbonated drinks. From December 1, this sin tax will be expanded to shisha and other drinks that will contain sugar. Jihad Azour, director for the Middle East and Central Asia Department at the IMF, also called on the regional government­s to diverse revenue sources including introducti­on of new taxes. The fund had earlier asked Riyadh to double VAT to 10 per cent.

Jane McCormick, global head of tax and legal for KPMG Internatio­nal, said it seems inevitable that VAT is likely to rise for a lot of reasons. "It is tax easy to collect. You can automate a lot of processes." Surandar Jesrani, managing partner and CEO of MMJS Consulting, said GCC government­s do recognise revenue from oil would be under immense pressure over the next few years. "The introducti­on of GCC-wide VAT and excise laws may only be a prelude to introducti­on of further tax measures in line with global initiative­s," Jesrani said. "I believe that the advent of such further tax laws are on the horizon for UAE and Bahrain in the form of corporate taxes, withholdin­g taxes and retention regimes since a majority of GCC member states do have direct taxes through corporate.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Pakistan