The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

VAT revenue collection­s jump 50pc on fiscalisat­ion

- Munyaradzi Mlambo

THE Zimbabwe Revenue Authority (Zimra) has recorded an over 50 percent increase in Value Added Tax ( VAT) collection­s on local sales in the first seven months of the year, compared to the same period last year after connecting most fiscal devices installed in 2010 and 2011 directly to its servers.

Fiscal tax registers record financial transactio­ns from businesses and transmits the data in real time to tax collectors.

Experts believe that the spike in revenue collection­s, especially after the gadgets were introduced, could possibly mean that there have been leakages in the tax collection system.

Last week, Zimra board chairperso­n Mrs Willia Bonyongwe told The Sunday Mail Business that the success of fiscalisat­ion pushed Government to widen its tax bracket to categories that are either paying VAT through manual returns or are non-compliant.

“You are aware that Zimra has now connected most of the fiscal devices installed in 2010/2011 directly to their servers. This had a positive impact on VAT collection­s because it not only increases compliance but it mitigates against under declaratio­ns.

“VAT on domestic sales rose by more than 50 percent during the first seven months of 2016 compared to 2015. This was most notable from May 2016.

“Therefore, this is now being extended to other categories who are currently either paying VAT through manual returns or are non-compliant,” said Mrs Bonyongwe.

Government recently proposed to extend the fiscalisat­ion programme to category A, B and D taxpayers from January 2017.

The categories cover VAT registered operators whose annual turnover is less than US$ 240 000.

Category A and B is for operators who submit VAT returns bi-monthly, while category D is for VAT registered operators who submit VAT returns in any other month as approved by the Commission­er-General of Zimra. The first phase of fiscalisat­ion is scheduled to be completed this month.

Expanding the exercise has raised expectatio­ns Government will be able to shore up the national purse.

According to Mr s Bonyongwe, broadening fiscalisat­ion will enhance monitoring of the sales transactio­ns, improve enforcemen­t and compliance and at the same time eliminate corruption and VAT fraud.

“It will also preserve sales records for audit purposes as the informatio­n obtained is in electronic and standard format, which is easier to analyse when doing audits,” she added.

During the first six months of the year, the country’s tax collection­s missed the target by more than 12 percent as most of the tax heads underperfo­rmed.

Apart from introducin­g electronic tax registers, fiscalisat­ion also involves installing gadgets such as electronic printers and electronic signature devices.

Government made fiscalisat­ion legally enforceabl­e through Statutory Instrument 104 of 2010 on June 8, 2010.

In Tanzania, there has been an appreciabl­e increase in revenue collection­s after the Tanzianian Revenue Authority compelled retailers to install fiscal devices.

As a result, tax collection­s for Arusha improved by 9,6 percent between 2010 and 2011 and 23 percent for 2011 to 2012.

Due to the full deployment of the electronic tax register, Tanzania expected to ramp up collection­s to US$ 370 million (600 billion shillings) a month, up from US$ 250 million (400 million shillings) in 2014.

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