NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

After restrictio­ns on electronic money, Q3 revenue from 2% tax is 32% lower than anticipate­d

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GOVERNMENT’S restrictio­ns on electronic money have helped stabilise the currency, but they have also eroded revenue contributi­ons from the 2% tax, an unpopular but reliable revenue source over the past two years.

According to the third quarter revenue data just released by the Zimbabwe Revenue Authority (Zimra), revenue from the intermedia­ted money transfer tax was over 30% lower than expected.

“The intermedia­ted money transfer tax lost its momentum, missing the target of $5 860 000 000 by $1 947 176 596,12 (32,23%) and contributi­ng only 6,86% to total revenue for the quarter. This was partly due to the monetary policy interventi­ons introduced to harness the local currency depreciati­on that was threatenin­g economic stability,” Zimra says.

In comparison, the 2% tax accounted for 12% of tax revenue in the first three months of the year, and 11% in the second quarter.

Finance minister Mthuli Ncube introduced the tax, which takes 2% off most electronic transactio­ns, in October 2018.

The tax drew consumer and business outrage, but helped Ncube close the budget deficit and raise $160 million between October 2018 and the end of that year.

Since June, transactio­ns of up to $300 do not pay the tax. For forex transactio­ns, the tax is not charged on transactio­ns of less than US$5.

In May, the government started tightening the lid on mobile money and bank transfers. From August, daily limits of $5 000 have applied, while users can only operate a single mobile money account.

Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe accused mobile money companies of allowing their platforms to be used for illegal trades that undermined the Zimbabwe dollar.

The restrictio­ns have reflected in the financials of Cassava Smartech, whose EcoCash controls 98% of the mobile money market.

In a recent update, Cassava reported that EcoCash’s contributi­on to group revenue had dropped from 74% at the start of 2019 to 64% in the second half of this year.

Across the industry, active mobile money subscripti­ons dropped 2.8% in the second quarter, according to industry regulator Postal and Telecommun­ications Regulatory Authority of Zimbabwe.

The performanc­e of other tax sources reflect how the economy has performed so far this year, which has been marked by COVID-19 shutdowns.

In the second quarter, taxes from companies accounted for 21% of tax revenue, higher than individual tax at 17%. This changed in the third quarter; companies now made up 14,63% of taxes while individual­s accounted for 15,26%.

Says Zimra: “The positive performanc­e (on company tax) during the quarter was mainly driven by the relaxation of lockdown conditions which resulted in more businesses resuming operations, restrictio­ns of imports in line with COVID-19 measures which led to an increased demand for locally produced goods, as well as ongoing compliance enforcemen­t projects which the Authority is implementi­ng.”

The slowdown in imports has hit customs duty, one of Zimra’s biggest earners.

“Customs duties, which are usually among the top five contributo­rs, only contribute­d 9.40% due to the impact of the lockdown on imports: only food, medicines, protective clothing and machinery were being imported, and these were mainly either duty free or subject to duty rebates,” Zimra reports.

Mining royalties were also down, a sign of the energy shortages and slowdown in output due to the COVID-19 disruption­s.

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