The Star Late Edition

NGO highlights tax avoidance

- Ann Crotty Minister

FINANCE Pravin Gordhan’s insistence on the need to ensure companies in Africa pay their fair share of tax comes just weeks after UKbased NGO ActionAid released a damning report on a document issued by auditing and consultanc­y services group Deloitte, which advises companies on how to avoid paying tax on their African operations.

According to ActionAid, the Deloitte document advises internatio­nal companies to invest in Africa through Mauritius to avoid tax. ActionAid, which acknowledg­es that tax avoidance is legal, states that the Deloitte report provides companies wanting to invest in Mozambique with details on how they can achieve a 60 percent reduction in withholdin­g tax and a 100 percent reduction in capital gains tax by investing through Mauritius.

“Mozambique is one of the poorest countries in Africa where over 50 percent of the population lives below the poverty line and the average life expectancy is just 49 years,” ActionAid said.

Mauritius, which has been described as the “gateway to Africa” for internatio­nal businesses, has 14 double taxation treaties with African countries.

An example used by Deloitte describes how a Chinese company investing directly in Mozambique would be required to pay a 20 percent withholdin­g tax on profits remitted as divi- Deloitte is failing Africa for as long as it continues to advise on tax avoidance strategies. dends to its Chinese parent. The withholdin­g tax is in addition to the 32 percent tax paid on the profits. If the Chinese company sold its Mozambique operation it would have to pay 32 percent on any capital gain.

However, if the Chinese company invested in Mozambique through Mauritius it would only have to pay 8 percent withholdin­g tax on any dividends paid to China. In addition, it would have to pay no capital gains tax if it sold the Mozambican operation at a profit because of the double taxation treaty Mauritius has with Mozambique.

In its response to ActionAid’s criticism, Deloitte said that the absence of double tax treaties, which were freely negotiated between the government­s involved, “could result in a reduction of investment, and less profit subject to normal business taxes in the countries concerned”.

However, ActionAid tax policy adviser Toby Quantrill countered that these treaties were being used to deprive poor countries of hundreds of millions of dollars in tax.

“These techniques may be legal but that does not mean they are moral. Tax revenues are desperatel­y needed to meet peoples’ most basic needs and to move countries away from aid dependency,” he said.

He added: “Big businesses have an important role to play in economic developmen­t in poor countries. But they also have to act in a socially responsibl­e way. Deloitte is failing Africa for as long as it continues to advise on tax avoidance strategies in the way [it has] been doing.”

According to ActionAid, the Deloitte report was presented at a conference in Beijing held just two weeks before the start of the Group of Eight conference in Northern Ireland in July. A key topic at that conference was what action could be taken to combat the impact of tax avoidance internatio­nally.

 ??  ?? Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan warns on tax dodging.
Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan warns on tax dodging.

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