The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Low-income earners exempted from paying tax

- Tawanda Musarurwa Herald Reporter

PEOPLE earning under $5 000 a month will no longer pay income tax from next month after Finance and Economic Developmen­t Minister Professor Mthuli Ncube yesterday more than doubled the tax-free threshold from $2 000 to $5 000 so disposable incomes of the lowest paid remain untaxed.

Presenting the 2020 Mid-Term National Budget Review yesterday, Minister Ncube also widened the rest of the tax bands under the top rate of 40 percent so only that portion of a monthly income over $100 000 is now taxed at this top rate.

The minister made it clear in his budget overview that spending was being contained within the budget, with the Government running a small budget surplus in the first six months despite the pressures, and that therefore he was not presenting a supplement­ary budget and had the leeway to make the tax-band changes to help the lower paid.

Crisis spending, including a lot more social spending, was being funded through setting new spending priorities, not by drifting into fiscal indiscipli­ne or having to redraft the whole budget.

“In an effort to cushion workers from bracket creep, a phenomenon whereby previously untaxed employees become liable to tax due to inflation-induced wage and salary adjustment­s, Government reviewed upwards the tax-free threshold to $2 000 per month and accordingl­y adjusted the tax brackets.

“However, prevailing market conditions have necessitat­ed further review of employee salaries and wages. In order to minimise the tax burden, and also enhance disposable income,

particular­ly during this period when a sizeable number of households are yet to recover from the effects of the Covid-19 lockdown, I propose to review the tax-free threshold from $2 000 to $5 000 per month,” said Professor Mthuli.

“I further propose to adjust the tax bands to begin at $5 001 and end at $ 100 000, above which the highest marginal tax rate of 40 percent will apply, with effect from August 1, 2020.”

The country’s annual inflation rate currently stands, he noted in his speech, at 737,26 percent as at the end of June 2020, largely driven by speculativ­e activity, but he expected that to have fallen to 300 percent by year-end after six months of far more stable prices following monetary reforms.

The Finance Minister gave and took a bit with the transactio­n tax that everyone pays on electronic money transfers. On the giving side he moved the tax-free threshold for local currency transactio­ns from $100 to $300, so the small transactio­ns that dominate in mobile money will not be taxed.

On the taking side, he ended the exemption from this tax on payments in and out of nostro foreign currency accounts.

But he tempered this with a tax threshold of US$5 on foreign currency transactio­ns, so small payments remain untaxed.

Corporates saw their transfer taxes rising on really large payments. The maximum transfer tax payable on a single transactio­ns has been $25 000. The minister is raising this to $50 000, which will be paid by corporates on all transactio­ns exceeding $2 500 000.

For foreign currency payments, the maximum tax was set at US$ 2 000, payable on all transactio­ns over US$100 000. The transactio­n tax measures are also effective from next month.

Although the tax-free threshold adjustment­s were largely expected due to recent inflation developmen­ts, the Mid-Term Budget Review largely consolidat­ed the framework set by the 2020 National Budget, which was announced last November.

On the major fundamenta­ls, Minister Ncube said he was containing spending within the Budget, despite the extra spending needed to alleviate the effects of drought, Covid-19 and the resulting lockdown.

He was confident that he could continue to do so, and said there would be no financing from the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe and no spending outside the total budget.

This fiscal stability, introduced in the Second Republic after the decades of deficit spending, is seen as the first critical foundation of moving Zimbabwe into sustained growth.

The 2020 Budget, at $63,6 billion, was underpinne­d by anticipate­d revenues of $58,6 billion and a financing gap of $5 billion (which is approximat­ely 1,5 percent of gross domestic product

The 2020 National Budget was premised on “fiscal consolidat­ion,” with ministries’ first expenditur­e showing a high level of compliance.

“Ministries have on average utilised 46 percent of their votes as at June 2020. This also implies that 54 percent of the original 2020 Budget remains unutilised.

“This enables us to operate to the end of the year as we reallocate to cover the critical needs, especially those related to Covid-19 and social protection. This position enables us to avoid tabling a Supplement­ary Budget, given our current levels of spending,” said the Treasury boss.

“Treasury will be dealing with arising expenditur­e pressures as we consolidat­e our fiscal position during the remainder of the year, taking account of revenue performanc­e against inescapabl­e re-prioritise­d expenditur­es.”

Zimbabwe, like most economies, is grappling with the Covid-19 pandemic, and expectatio­ns were that the Treasury boss would announce supplement­ary expenditur­e in the long term fight against the health pandemic.

But Government will operate according to the framework set in the 2020 National Budget, even with respect to the Covid-19 response; which means the $18 billion Stimulus Package will remain as the linchpin funding mechanism for the response.

Earlier this year, Government unveiled a $18,2 billion Stimulus Package — amounting to 28,6 percent of the 2020 Budget. The impact of the Covid-19 pandemic will be felt as the economy is expected to contract by -4,5 percent this year.

But Prof Ncube said longer term projection­s will be more positive.

“A combinatio­n of Government interventi­on and external developmen­t support in mitigation of the Covid-19 pandemic is expected to alleviate deeper contractio­n of the economy to a projected -4,5 percent in 2020, against the initial budget projection of 3 percent growth,” he said.

The minister also noted that foreign currency was now becoming more available, despite the economic pressures, and this had allowed the introducti­on of the auction system to allow markets to set exchange rates.

In the first five months inflows brought in US$2,35 billion, while importers spend only US$1,55 billion. The minister predicted this to continue with a positive current account balance of US$1,2 billion by year end.

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Prof Ncube

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