Jamaica Gleaner

Big business bats for urban tax-break retention

- Huntley Medley/Senior Business Writer

THE FINANCIAL fallout globally and in Jamaica from the current COVID19 pandemic has again placed in the spotlight the issue of private sector tax incentives for economic reconstruc­tion.

At least two business umbrella groups – the Jamaica Chamber of Commerce, JCC, and the Jamaica Manufactur­ers and Exporters Associatio­n, JMEA, – have lined up in support of lobbying the Government to maintain and/or reintroduc­e the Tax Incentive Programme as part of a second wave of COVID-19 recovery economic assistance to businesses.

The 10-year Urban Renewal (Tax Relief ) Act for Spanish Town, which allows tax write-off of more than 30 per cent for private developmen­ts, expired in March 2018 and has not renewed by the Government.

Talk has been swirling in business circles that Finance Minister Nigel Clarke intends to abandon the incentive regime entirely, a move that Howard Mitchell, a leading businessma­n and former private sector umbrella group head, said would be “retrograde”. He has suggested that critical major private sector investment and funding decisions have been delayed as result of the government’s stance.

URBAN RENEWAL INITIATIVE

The urban renewal initiative was introduced for downtown Kingston in 1995, extended to Port Royal in 1996, Montego Bay in 2000 and activated for Spanish Town in 2008 with then finance minister Audley Shaw championin­g the programme.

The legislatio­n for Kingston has been extended for several 10-year periods and is set to expire January 19, 2025, five years from now, but industry sources also say there appears to be a move afoot by the Government to repeal that law before its scheduled expiration.

Companies doing commercial developmen­t in the designated areas benefit from urban renewal bonds, investment tax credit, taxfree rental income and exemption from transfer tax.

There is speculatio­n that the finance ministry’s bid to ditch the tax incentives is part of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund guidelines against incentives and tax breaks generally.

Efforts to get a comment from Finance Minister Clarke have been unsuccessf­ul. Contacted while travelling in Europe in February, Clarke said he would provide a response on his return to Jamaica, when he would, “ensure accurate answers”.

He added, at the time, that in failing to await his response, “the newspaper would do a disservice (by) printing inaccurate informatio­n or supplying inaccurate policy prescripti­on and/or policy rationale.”

Subsequent requests for the promised response have gone unanswered.

The minister also did not address the matter in his opening nor closing Budget presentati­ons, but spoke to the passage of legislatio­n to make permanent the abolishing of the minimum business tax, removal of the asset tax for unregulate­d entities, cessation of ad valorem stamp duty, reduction in the transfer tax, and increase in the General Consumptio­n Tax threshold for businesses from $3 million to $10 million.

Responses via email from the Urban Developmen­t Corporatio­n, UDC, which acts as the secretaria­t for the Tax Incentive Programme

on behalf of the finance ministry, note that over the 10 years to 2018 there have been four applicatio­ns totalling planned investment­s of $8.1 billion for the benefits under the facility for Spanish Town. Applicatio­ns for investment­s to the tune of $8.6 billion have been made for downtown Kingston. The UDC response did not say what portion, if any, of these amounts, has already been approved by the Government.

“For the Spanish Town Incentive Area, we stopped accepting applicatio­ns as of March 13, 2018 and have been notifying prospectiv­e applicants (from) as early as 2017 that the Spanish Town Incentive area was going to expire and that no applicatio­ns could be accepted after March 13, 2018,” the agency said.

It added: “The UDC acts as the Secretaria­t for the Tax Incentive Programme, for which there is a review committee and a process that is managed on behalf of the Ministry of Finance. As such, the UDC can advise on developmen­t potential for the area but the matter of tax relief is led by

Government policy.”

Chamber of Commerce president Lloyd Distant says issues surroundin­g the cessation of the tax-incentive programme were brought to the attention of the organisati­on at its meeting in February and the JCC is looking into the matter. He told The Financial Gleaner last Thursday that the concerns will be included in the work of a group looking at possible recommenda­tions to be made to the Government with a view to advocating for the retention and reintroduc­tion of the programme.

SUGGESTION­S

“From where we sit, we are continuing to pull in suggestion­s and recommenda­tions about the kinds of things that need be done additional­ly, whether it is economic relief, incentives or other tax-based relief programmes to be recommende­d to the Government. We got the first wave, the question is what is the second wave since this thing [the pandemic] looks like it is going beyond what has been put on the table in terms of timelines,” Distant said. He promised a more fulsome response once the chamber has had an opportunit­y to discuss the matter in detail.

JMEA head Richard Pandohie says the associatio­n is fully supportive of the tax-break programmes in the midst of the economic devastatio­n caused by the virus spread.

“Anything that will lead to investment in the productive sectors, lead to increased innovation, any sort of incentives to support growth including to get manufactur­ing going in key areas such as Spanish Town, downtown and those areas, we definitely will support them,”Pandohie said in an interview last Thursday.

He is recommendi­ng a broader reset of the economy.

“I think we have a huge opportunit­y at this time to reset certain critical sectors in the country’s economy. For example, we have banked a lot on the services sector. Now, with what has happened to tourism and remittance­s, it is clear that we need to diversify the economic base to allow for a sustainabl­e and resilient growth agenda,” said the JMEA president, who is also CEO of large conglomera­te Seprod Limited.

“We now recognise how vulnerable we are. Agricultur­e, agro-processing and manufactur­ing need to be looked at very seriously if we are going to create sustainabl­e and resilient growth in the economy going forward,” he said.

While president of the Private Sector Organisati­on of Jamaica Keith Duncan said he was unaware of the issue but would look into it, his predecesso­r, Howard Mitchell, is cautioning the Government against abandoning the tax break.

Asked about the issue in early March, Mitchell, the immediate PSOJ past president, declared interest in the matter as a director of Cari-Med Group Limited, the Glen Christian-led company that stands to benefit from the tax incentive, having unveiled a $6 billion investment for the Spanish Town area of St Catherine.

“I feel strongly that the Government and particular­ly the minister of finance need to reconsider the position because our (economic) recovery has not been that robust that we can likely say remove this particular incentive for investment in an area that badly needs investment. This is, in fact, one of the areas that suffer from crime, deprivatio­n and inequality,” the businessma­n said.

“I strongly urge the minister of finance to at least meet and have dialogue with the business community in respect of this. I think it’s a retrograde step to remove it at this time,” Mitchell declared.

Cari-Med chairman and CEO Glen Christian declined to say how the cancellati­on of the tax incentive would impact his investment plans, but noted the company had put in an applicatio­n for the waiver before the March 2018 expiration and is still awaiting final approval.

He said earlier this year Cari-Med received notificati­on indicating the applicatio­n had been recommende­d by a committee establishe­d by the Ministry of Economic Growth and Job Creation, but that approval would have to await considerat­ion and sign-off by the Cabinet.

The Financial Gleaner understand­s that an applicatio­n has also been made by the GraceKenne­dy conglomera­te for commercial developmen­t in Spanish Town. Group CEO Don Wehby, who is also a government senator, would only say in response that he was “on record to investors/ shareholde­rs [regarding] the importance of the Urban Renewal Act to urban developmen­t”.

 ?? FILE PHOTOS ?? King’s House sits in the square of Spanish Town, capital of St Catherine. Companies looking to invest in the historic town are pushing for the urban tax incentive programme to remain in place.
FILE PHOTOS King’s House sits in the square of Spanish Town, capital of St Catherine. Companies looking to invest in the historic town are pushing for the urban tax incentive programme to remain in place.
 ??  ?? Howard Mitchell, businessma­n and past president of PSOJ.
Howard Mitchell, businessma­n and past president of PSOJ.
 ??  ?? Glen Christian, chairman of CariMed, is investing $6 billion in a distributi­on hub in St Catherine.
Glen Christian, chairman of CariMed, is investing $6 billion in a distributi­on hub in St Catherine.

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