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UAE RECORDS HIGH COMPLIANCE WITH EXCISE DUTY ON UNHEALTHY PRODUCTS

Tax on tobacco and carbonated drinks introduced last year to boost state revenues and improve public health

- SARAH TOWNSEND

Almost all companies registered to pay the UAE’s new excise duty on cigarettes and carbonated drinks have complied with the rules a year after it was introduced, with positive implicatio­ns for public health, the Federal Tax Authority said yesterday.

The level of compliance with the law, measured by the number of tax returns submitted to the government, reached 97.7 per cent of all 715 registered businesses, the FTA said.

“These positive outcomes clearly indicate we have begun to achieve the main objectives of excise tax – most notable of which is building a safe and healthy society by reducing the consumptio­n of goods that harm the health of community members and affect the quality of the environmen­t,” said Khalid Al Bustani, the FTA’s director general.

“The system has also helped increase financial resources to support expansion of government services to the public.”

Mr Al Bustani urged tobacco companies to comply with the excise tax regulation­s to avoid penalties or a temporary ban on the sale of their products.

Like other GCC countries, the UAE introduced taxes in the past year to increase state revenues following a three-year oil price slump. In January, it introduced a 5 per cent VAT on certain goods and services, along with Saudi Arabia, while Bahrain and other GCC countries plan to introduce VAT from 2019.

The introducti­on of VAT in the UAE is expected to raise up to 1.7 per cent of GDP, or up to Dh24 billion per year, Moody’s said in a report in September.

The UAE’s excise tax came into effect on October 1, 2017, when a 50 per cent levy was imposed on soft drinks and a 100 per cent levy on tobacco products and energy drinks. As well as boosting revenues, the UAE is also working to improve public health as instances of diabetes, cancer and heart disease are high, according to the World Health Organisati­on.

Mr Al Bustani cited a report by WHO’s regional office for the eastern Mediterran­ean, which he said praised the UAE’s anti-smoking efforts through its imposition of the tax.

“The statistics indicate that the value of the country’s foreign trade of tobacco and its products decreased significan­tly over the course of this year – a testament to [the UAE’s] policies to reduce consumptio­n of goods that adversely affect human health and the environmen­t,” Mr Al Bustani said.

The high level of compliance was due to the ease of the tax return procedures and flexible payment mechanisms, he said.

The FTA has launched more than 60 guides covering legislativ­e and practical aspects of UAE tax regulation­s to illustrate what products and services are taxed and how taxpayers can submit returns.

The coming tax period will produce more positive results as several new regulatory mechanisms and systems are due to be introduced, Mr Al Bustani said. The most significan­t of these is the digital tax stamp scheme for tobacco oroducts, to be enforced at the start of 2019, he said.

This is intended to establish a framework for authoritie­s to streamline tax collection and combat tax evasion.

The UAE will apply a digital tracking system for the labelling of tobacco products with their price and safety warnings under the new scheme.

It will work through a stamp or digital seal on these products. This will be in turn registered in the FTA’s database, thus ensuring that the tax is paid.

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