Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Call to levy tax in RTGS to support Zim dollar

- Harare Bureau

CENTRAL and local Government should give the foreign exchange auction the opportunit­y to operate efficientl­y by levying taxes and fees in local currency to create demand for the Zimbabwe dollar, industry says.

The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe introduced the foreign exchange auction system in June this year after unsuccesfu­l use of the interbank and the fixed rate regime, which had been adopted in March to ensure price stability following the outbreak of Coronaviru­s.

The call by industry to entrench use of the Zimbabwe dollar as the anchor currency comes as the economy has seen increased usage of the US dollar in transactin­g, including Government payment of allowances, collection of levies, taxes and fees and informal and fuel sectors, wages and salaries, large supermarke­ts, medical services, educationa­l services.

In a reserach note on the June inflation, which saw the annual rate dropping from 785.6 percent in May 2020 to 737,3 percent the Confederat­ion of Zimbabwe Industries (CZI) said tax on income and profits contribute­s 32 percent, VAT 23 percent and taxes on financial and capital transactio­ns 13 percent.

“Levying taxes in local currency should increase demand for the local currency and this should have positive effects on exchange rate and inflation,” said the industry body.

The business community, CZI said, is still a little skeptical about the sustainabi­lity of the foreign exchange auction market, given the currency ambiguity obtaining in the economy.

Uncertaint­y is heightened by persistent policy reversals. As authoritie­s announce de-dollarisat­ion, the re-dollarisat­ion tidal wave is gaining steam in the economy as economic agents can now transact in multi-currencies since March 2020, CZI added.

The industrial body also noted that the Government was possibly fueling the dollarisat­ion process by demanding certain taxes and fees in foreign currency. As a result of Covid-19, some businesses are not sure if they will be able to resume operations after the lockdown due to cash flow difficulti­es and subdued demand.

Those that have resumed operations are functionin­g in a high cost environmen­t.

Zimbabwe dollar tax revenue constitute­s 97 percent of total revenue and levying value added tax (VAT), pay as you earn (PAYE) and income taxes in local currency should go a long way in creating demand for the local currency as taxes contribute significan­tly to revenue.

The country reintroduc­ed its domestic currency last year, almost 10 years after scrapping it due to hyperinfla­tion and adopting US dollar anchored multicurre­ncy system.

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