The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Intensify informal tax collection: IMF

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AS Zimbabwe seeks to optimise revenue collection from the informal sector, a new research study from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) has tipped that lower compliance costs and stronger enforcemen­t can reduce the unfair cost advantages informal firms enjoy, to make room for more productive and tax compliant firms to increase their market share.

The paper says a number of measures can be employed to redress the anomaly. “Measures include reducing compliance costs and promoting compliance by ensuring that taxpayers are registered; that they are knowledgea­ble regarding their tax obligation­s and that reporting is accurate,” said the IMF’s Fiscal Monitor analytical chapter released today.

The report also said the productivi­ty of firms in low-income developing countries has been declining since 2005, as measured by total factor productivi­ty, due to resource misallocat­ion and poor use of labour and capital.

The report says the resource misallocat­ion manifests itself in a wide dispersion in productivi­ty levels across firms, even within narrowly defined industries.

“This dispersion reveals that some businesses in each country have managed to achieve high levels of efficiency, possibly close to those of the world frontier in their particular industry, which in turn implies that existing conditions within the country can be compatible with higher levels of productivi­ty,” says the report.

It further argues that countries can reap more total factor productivi­ty gains from reducing resource misallocat­ion and allowing other firms to catch up with the high productivi­ty firms in their own economies.

The report further postulated that upgrading the design of tax systems can help countries chip away at resource misallocat­ion by ensuring that firms’ decisions are made for business and not tax reasons.

In Zimbabwe, there have been a number of scenarios whereby taxes were imposed with an apparent intention of just mobilising more revenue for the fiscus without considerin­g the impact on business performanc­e and viability.

In February, for instance, Government imposed Value Added Tax (VAT) on some basic commoditie­s in a move which saw prices going up, resulting in the tax being reversed.

Last week, the taxman also had to reverse the tax it had imposed on tobacco farmers without tax clearances after farmers complained that the size of the tax was just about equal to their margins.

“Government can eliminate distortion­s that they themselves have created. Government should seek to minimise differenti­ated tax treatments across assets and financing.

“This approach would help tilt firms’ investment decisions toward assets that are more productive, rather than more tax-favoured,” said the report.

“In emerging and low-income developing countries, stronger tax administra­tion could help reduce the unfair cost advantage enjoyed by informal firms that under-report their sales to tax authoritie­s,” it added. - Wires.

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