Khaleej Times

Tobacco, fizzy drinks to cost double from Oct 1

- Waheed Abbas

dubai — Prices of soft drinks, energy drinks and tobacco will shoot up when excise will come into force from October 1 in the UAE.

Younis Haji Al Khouri, undersecre­tary at the ministry of finance, said excise on fizzy drinks will be hiked by 50 per cent and that on tobacco and energy drinks by 100 per cent in order to discourage the consumptio­n of harmful products by residents as well as to protect the environmen­t.

He said that under the new law, items carried out of the country by travellers will not come under excise but those which are brought into the country for consumptio­n will be taxed.

In June 2016, the finance ministers of the Gulf Cooperatio­n Council (GCC) approved a unified agreement for the developmen­t of national regimes for excise. As part of the GCC agreement, Saudi Arabia started implementi­ng excise from June 2017 at the same rate as the UAE. He explained that the tax would be implemente­d across the country, including free zones and ports.

On Monday, the President, His Highness Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan, issued Federal Decree Law No. 7, 2017, which

states that the tax rates do not exceed 200 per cent of the excise price.

Nimish Makvana, partner at Crowe Horwath, said the tax on tobacco, soft drinks and energy drinks would discourage the consumptio­n of products that negatively impact the environmen­t and, more importantl­y, people’s health, while the additional source of government revenue will strengthen activities and initiative­s for the welfare of society, keeping the growth of economy in mind.

“The introducti­on of excise will have an impact on consumptio­n, and sales may drop to some extent due to additional burden on end-consumers with the imposition of tax,” he added.

Biraja Jena, chairman and managing director, Imperial Capital Investment­s, said the indirect tax will be collected from manufactur­ers/producers or importers who shall come under its ambit and then passed on to the consumers, hence costing the end-users more.

The new taxes are expected to add around Dh7 billion to the federal budget, Al Khouri was quoted as saying by the Wam news agency.

Once the excise law is implemente­d, businesses will be required to file an excise return every month.

Due taxes must be paid within 15 days of the end of every month. Filing and paying will be done online, global consultanc­y KPMG said in a note released in May.

Khalid Al Bustani, director general of the Federal Tax Authority, earlier said that 21 specialise­d workshops on valueadded tax (VAT) and excise will be organised in the second phase of the tax system’s awareness campaign.

waheedabba­s@khaleejtim­es.com

 ??  ?? 100% EXCISE: Discouragi­ng harmful habits
100% EXCISE: Discouragi­ng harmful habits

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