The Malta Business Weekly

Businesses that honour tax obligation­s are being discrimina­ted against – Chamber

-

The Malta Chamber of Commerce, Enterprise and Industry said that businesses that comply with tax regulation­s are being discrimina­ted against.

In a statement the Chamber said that it has taken note of Legal Notice 419 published on 5 November entitled Exemption from Tax on Property Transfers (Set-off of Tax Arrears) Rules.

According to this legal notice, those who have tax arrears that were due by January of this year will be allowed to pay any tax due on the transfer of property purchased before March 2021 against their arrears and thereby be exempt from tax on property transfers to the extent that they are in arrears.

Like every other scheme intended to bring taxpayers in order, this scheme benefits only the defaulters and does not consider those who have their tax payments in order, the Chamber said. This in itself is unfair on those employers and businesses who pay their taxes when and as due. This legal notice seeks only to proliferat­e an unlevel playing field in favour of those who are in default and who are in the habit of using their due tax monies as their overdraft facility.

With its attachment to property transfers, this legal notice indicates that government believes that tax monies have been used to purchase property and that defaulters do not have the cash to settle tax arrears promptly and can only do so if they liquidate some of their property. If we do not want to see any more of this cavalier behaviour in the future, we should make sure that people are not able to purchase additional property before they settle their tax arrears. Only then will the exemption from tax on property transfers, which will only be allowed until 31 December 2022 according to said legal notice, be effective in curbing old habits.

The Chamber said it felt compelled to draw attention to the fact that those who default on tax payments to finance speculativ­e activities may also end up delaying settlement of trade credit indefinite­ly to the detriment of businesses that supply them. Such practices are extremely damaging and need to be discourage­d. It would be good to see schemes designed to help businesses recover their dues from defaulting unrelated parties who are heavily invested in property.

Finally, the Chamber reiterated its call to blacklist businesses that do not honour their tax payment obligation­s and hold them back from participat­ing in public procuremen­t. There is no level playing field between businesses that honour their obligation­s and those who do not. Competitiv­e calls must factor this in to encourage more compliance and curb unfair practices.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta