Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

High tax loss risk as economy re-dollarises

- Business Writer

With the Zimbabwean economy set to move towards full “re- dollarisat­ion”, economic analysts have warned of growing risk of serious potential tax loss coming along with the growing use of the US dollars.

The trends in the re- dollarisat­ion have “deepened” with domestic sales in the US dollars now close to 80 percent, according to economics professor, Gift Mugano.

With the bulk of the transactio­ns reportedly being in cash, they are seen as favouring tax evasion.

Last year, the Government enacted legislatio­n to entrench the multi-currency system, which makes both the United States and Zimbabwe dollars legal tender for all local transactio­ns for the duration of the National Developmen­t Strategy 1 ( NDS1), the country’s medium-term economic blueprint, which runs until 2025.

Before the enactment of the law, the Government had already legalised the use of foreign currency for local transactio­ns in March 2020 at the height of Covid-19.

There was phenomenal growth in the use of US dollars including loans to corporates and individual­s, payments of utility bills and local authoritie­s, and salary payments.

The US dollar-based retail transactio­ns also increased after the narrowing of the gap between black and official exchange rates since August last year when the Government put in place several measures to stabilise the local currency and tame inflation.

After significan­tly declining from 140 percent in May 2022 to between 5 percent and 15 percent in November, the foreign exchange premium rate is, however, increasing in light of the rising exchange rate on the parallel market, now around $1 200 to US$ 1.

Mugano said the re- dollarisat­ion, compounded by the high informalit­y of the economy would be “detrimenta­l” to revenue collection efforts by the Government, the

State-owned tax collecting agency since most transactio­ns are cash-based.

“The risk comes with the potential loss of fiscal revenue on the backdrop of informalis­ation of the US dollar sales,” Mugano told Business Weekly in an interview.

The 2 percent Intermedia­ted Money Transfer Tax on domestic foreign currency transfers and 20 percent domestic export retention was discouragi­ng businesses from “exclusivel­y banking” all their US dollar cash sales, Mugano added.

“A snap survey I did shows that companies are facing exchange rate loss of 15 – 17 percent on the back of the 2 percent IMTT, bank charges and 20 percent export retention.

The losses emanating from export retention, in particular, are arising from the existing disparitie­s between the official exchange rate and black market rates.

“Based on this observatio­n, the temptation is very high for businesses that collect cash not to deposit it in the banks thereby narrowing the tax base. This is why you hear about thousands of dollars being raided by robbers at business premises.”

Mugano said the policy matrix of the 2 percent IMTT and 20 percent domestic export retention was “doing more harm than good and must be scrapped.

“However, since the Government insists on these policy instrument­s, my submission is that technocrat­s at both the central bank and the Ministry of Finance and Economic Developmen­t should carry out an academic exercise on the pros and cons of the 20 percent export retention and the 2 percent IMTT,” said Mugano.

“They all have the numbers and thus are qualified to make an informed decision as to whether these current policy instrument­s are bringing more benefits than harm.”

Carlos Tadya, a Harare-based economist added;

“The business is already over-taxed” and the

migration to re- dollarisat­ion creates loopholes for avoiding paying tax.

“( The) under-ground cash activities and transactio­ns are increasing and this will lead to a significan­t shrinkage of the tax base.

“Some businesses are offering customers discounts on conditions that they are not receipted to avoid using fiscal devices that record taxable sales transactio­ns,” he added.

Last year, Finance and Economic

Developmen­t Minister Professor Mthuli Ncube, warned that re-dollarisat­ion, coupled with high informalit­y would shrink the taxable base, as most transactio­ns were “going undergroun­d where most activities are cash-based.”

He said the Government would consolidat­e the stabilisat­ion measures and strengthen tax collection efficiency through audits and other administra­tive measures.

Mthuli said the Government was modernisin­g tax systems, broadening the tax bases as well as introducin­g more efficient ways of raising revenue from the informal sector.

Last week, the Zimbabwe Revenue Authority ( ZIMRA) started implementi­ng a Block Management System ( BMS) that classifies all taxpayers into specific geographic­al locations or zones to improve tax collection­s.

The BMS came into effect on January 1 this year, the State-owned tax collector said in a notice last week.

The system involves zoning of taxpayers by geographic­al location and assigning ZIMRA officials to manage all taxpayers within a given zone or block. It will include flea markets, farms, industrial areas as well as informal traders and rural business locations.

Under the officials will engage all taxpayers through door-todoor visits, checking on all tax compliance issues including daily sales schedules, registrati­on for tax purposes, returns submission, payment of taxes and fiscalisat­ion.

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