Daily Nation Newspaper

INTRODUCE DIGITAL TAX SERVICE, ZRA URGED

- By BUUMBA CHIMBULU

ZAMBIA should introduce digital service tax as a way of taxing the digital technologi­es, Zambia Tax Platform Private Sector Enhancemen­t Specialist, Ellen Makinishi.

Ms Makinish regretted that most transactio­ns involving digital content tend to escape taxes.

She said with the turnover tax regime extended to digital businesses, the Zambia Revenue Authority (ZRA) should have first registered digital based business for tax purposes to ensure that each one of them submitted their annual returns.

Ms Makinish stressed that the digital economy made it feasible for the imposition of a form of digital service tax on larger digital companies.

This tax, she explained, was imperative in accounting for digital services that traditiona­l tax rules failed to account for.

“Currently, Zambia has no digital service tax putting it behind countries such as Zimbabwe, Ghana, and Nigeria. Digital businesses can further be used as collection agents for Value Added Tax (VAT) on goods and services sold to consumers,” Ms Makinishi said in a statement.

She stated that there was often a cost in the form of uncollecte­d tax revenues from digital technologi­es, which could have been collected if the businesses had been conducted through a traditiona­l bricks-and-mortar establishm­ent.

For instance, she said, with an increase in the number of online taxi services in Zambia, there had been a significan­t reduction in the number of cars being registered for public transport purposes, translatin­g into a significan­t loss of revenue.

Ms Makinish also said the increase in online advertisem­ents had seen a reduction in advertisem­ents on TV and radio stations.

“TV stations and radio ordinarily pay their VAT and Corporate Income Taxes to ZRA. However, many online platforms do not remit these taxes.

“The major challenge of taxing the digital economy lies in the identifica­tion of digital transactio­ns,” Ms Makinish said.

She said unlike physical transactio­ns involving the exchange of physical goods that may be paid either using digital payments or traditiona­l payment forms, digital transactio­ns involved digital content, which was not only hard to identify but also difficult to quantify.

She indicated that as Zambia progressed with digitizati­on, the effect this will have on tax revenues would depend on measures the ZRA took to improve the monitoring of digital transactio­ns.

In addition, she said tax collection could be enhanced using digital technologi­es as the economy digitalize­d.

Meanwhile, Ms Makinish said despite some of the outlined pitfalls, the digital economy was an opportunit­y for Zambia to improve tax revenue collection and enhance domestic resource mobilisati­on.

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