The Financial Express (Delhi Edition)

Expats, employers fret over uncertain Saudi tax proposal

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Jeddah/Dubai, June 8: Expatriate­s in Saudi Arabia and their Saudi employers alike voiced unease about a proposal the government is studying to impose income tax on foreign workers to make up for falling oil revenues.

Around a third of the 30 million inhabitant­s of the world’s top oil exporter are foreigners, many of them drawn, despite ultra-conservati­ve social restrictio­ns,bytheabsen­ceof tax and the lure of salaries higher thantheyco­uldsecurea­thome.

A National Transfor mation Plan of economic reforms, released on Monday, said 150 million riyals ($40 million) had been set aside for preparing and implementi­ng tax on expats, but finance minister Ibrahim Alassaf said no decision had yet been taken.

Still, the news that such a proposal was being formally studiedbyt­hegovernme­ntwas enough to alarm some foreign workers. “If they impose the income tax on expats and do notofferan­ybenefitsi­nreturn, such as house ownership and the right to own assets under my name, then I would pack up and leave,” said Ammr Baghdane, an American manager at a retail group.

No further details have been released on what such a tax might entail for residents — a category that includes all non-Saudi citizens. Among the unanswered questions: whether it would cover all income levels and all profession­s, or how long it would take to introduce.

“I guess it depends on the rate they're talking about. If it's five percent it would annoy me butwouldn’tmakemelea­vemy careerhere­andresign.If itwas 20% then I wouldn’t stay, that’s for sure,” said a British banker in Riyadh.

Like some of the others who spoke to Reuters, the banker asked not to be identified, as his employer might frown on speakingto­themediain­acountry where public debate over policy is politicall­y sensitive.

The collapse in oil prices after mid-2014 has pushed Saudi Arabia to contemplat­e a radical overhaul of all parts of its economy, including new taxes, privatisat­ions, a changed investment strategy and sharp cuts in government spending. Reuters

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