The National - News

FOUR GCC STATES NEED MORE TIME TO IMPLEMENT VAT, IMF OFFICIAL SAYS

▶ Qatar, Kuwait, Oman and Bahrain are not yet technicall­y or politicall­y ready to implement the levy

- DANIA SAADI

Qatar, Kuwait, Oman and Bahrain need more time to introduce VAT, because technicall­y and politicall­y they are not ready for the 5 per cent levy implemente­d in Saudi Arabia and the UAE in January, an IMF official said.

“Technicall­y, they should be able to be ready in a year and a half,” Abdelhak Senhadji, deputy director of the fiscal affairs department at the IMF told The

National. “Of course there is the issue of political will to introduce it.”

The IMF is working with the four GCC states, which are expected to introduce VAT as part of a GCC-wide agreement struck in 2016 to implement the levy across the six-member economic bloc, Mr Senhadji said.

Arabian Gulf countries are introducin­g taxes to help narrow fiscal deficits that have widened since 2015 because of the oil price slump from the mid2014 high of $115 a barrel to the trough of less than $30 a barrel in the beginning of 2016.

Saudi Arabia and the UAE have been leaders in tax reforms, with the introducti­on of VAT this year and excise taxes on energy drinks, fizzy drinks and cigarettes last year.

Bahrain introduced excise taxes in December.

“The fact is that [there was] political resistance in some countries [and] they were not ready technicall­y to introduce VAT, so the UAE and Saudi put a lot of resources to get ready for the VAT while the other countries have not,” said Mr Senhadji.

The introducti­on of VAT in Bahrain will be suspended until a joint committee involving the Cabinet and Parliament agrees on a new structure to distribute aid to lower-income Bahrainis, Reuters reported last month.

The fund has estimated that the introducti­on of VAT in the region could generate new revenue of 1.5 to 3 per cent of nonoil GDP.

According to Oxford Economics, 5 per cent VAT will lift inflation by 2 to 4 per cent in Saudi Arabia and the UAE, the two largest Arab economies, but will have little impact on GDP growth, given the counter-measures taken by the authoritie­s.

Saudi Arabia has approved a series of bonuses for public sector employees, military personnel, pensioners, students and beneficiar­ies of social services for a year starting from January 1 to help mitigate the impact of VAT and energy price increases.

The IMF expects minimal impact on inflation and GDP growth as well.

“It is a transitory effect: when you introduce VAT prices will go up but then over time they will decline,” Mr Senhadji said. “It will have a small effect on GDP, but again [based on] experience­s from around the world, particular­ly for low levels of VAT, we don’t see that as a major negative impact on growth.”

Government­s in the region could introduce more taxes to help lift revenue, on top of reducing spending, he said.

Property taxes are “fair” because people who are well-off will pay more taxes, but introducin­g corporate taxes is more problemati­c.

“You can’t take your property in a suitcase and leave with it, but capital is much more mobile,” said Mr Senhadji. “This [introducin­g corporate taxes] is a decision you can’t make in isolation. You have to think of what other countries are providing in terms of taxes and incentives and other incentives for attracting investment­s, and this is a worldwide issue.”

The UAE Government is considerin­g introducin­g new taxes in addition to the 5 per cent VAT, but has no plans to introduce income tax for the time being, the Ministry of Finance said in December. While introducin­g income tax could help boost revenue, many considerat­ions have to be taken into account, said Mr Senhadji.

“There is scope, of course, to raise more revenue with income tax,” he said.

“The question is much more [about] what is politicall­y feasible, what is socially advisable, [and] what economical­ly makes sense.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates