The Zimbabwe Independent

Plans to repeal crippling taxation on cards

- TAURAI MANGUDHLA

THE Ministry of Mines and Mining Developmen­t is currently engaged in major discussion­s with fiscal and monetary authoritie­s to address the issues of the punitive tax regime and surrender thresholds that are threatenin­g the operations of the mining sector.

Players in the mining sector have bemoaned the tax regime, which they say has crippled their operations. The sector has also expressed concern over the recent increase in the foreign currency threshold by the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe from 30% to 40%.

Mines and Mining Developmen­t minister Winston Chitando told Zimbabwe Independen­t in an interview on Wednesday that his ministry is seized with the issues that threaten the viability of the sector.

“With respect to fiscal and monetary issues, the fiscal issues, the plan is to come up with a consolidat­ed fiscal plan where miners will not be subjected to a multiplici­ty of taxes, but they will all be consolidat­ed,” Chitando said.

“The plan is being worked on by the Ministry of Finance and we believe that it shouldn’t be too long before it is concluded. On the monetary issues there is the issue of changes to retention thresholds which you mentioned and there are discussion­s taking place between the Chamber of Mines of Zimbabwe, the Ministry of Mines, the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe and the Ministry of Finance over this issue. It’s a matter which is being looked at.”

Mining contribute­d just over 50% of the country forex receipts in the first nine months of 2020. From the forex retention and mandatory liquidatio­n rules, the

sector contribute­d US$800 million to the RBZ auction system in the first nine months of 2020.

The developmen­t comes amid repeated calls for a major review of the country’s mining tax rules and as industry feels overtaxed and trapped in a web of a multiplici­ty of taxes, which, according to some experts, deters fresh capital inflows into the industry.

Taxation complicati­ons also stem from an outdated Mines and Minerals Act, which is to be amended by June 2021, according to Chitando. The Act was sent back to Parliament by President Emmerson Mnangagwa for certain sections of the Bill to be reviewed.

“The drafting of the amended Act is now complete, it’s now going through due process and we target that by June 2021 it will be law,”Chitando said.

It also follows concerns over the country’s policy inconsiste­ncy which, together with corruption and erratic power supplies are among the major reasons which deter the much-needed investment into the sector.

Government this week also made a U-turn on mining fees by repealing a Statutory Instrument which had pegged the charges in United States dollars, giving in to immense pressure from small-scale miners, who described the new structure as prohibitiv­e.

The new instrument (SI46), announced late Tuesday, has fees denominate­d in the Zimbabwean dollars and repealed its predecesso­r (SI45) which was made a few days earlier, in apparent manifestat­ion of bad governance in the form of policy inconsiste­ncies, which are among the major reasons the country struggles to secure investment.

In January, the RBZ made changes to foreign currency retention thresholds, which the miners are saying will exert pressure on their operations.

RBZ chief John Mangudya in his recent Monetary Policy Statement (MPS) said the bank would maintain and sustain the auction system through the 40% export surrender requiremen­t, 20% domestic foreign exchange sales proceeds surrender requiremen­t and 15% foreign exchange contributi­on from the fiscus.

So far, the auction system has doled out US$795 million, 70% of which went to raw materials.

In January, Mangudya made a raft of major reforms to stabilise the foreign exchange market, including immediatel­y scrapping the much-loathed compulsory requiremen­t to liquidate all unutilised export proceeds within 60 days.

This comes after industry raised concerns over the compulsory liquidatio­n of unutilised funds into the weakening and unstable local currency in 60 days, saying it erodes value.

The move was largely seen as a positive on the country’s ease of doing business scorecard, especially coming on the heels of a Ministry of Finance directive to tax business in the respective currency of transactio­n.

Mangudya, however, resolved to increase the export surrender requiremen­t from 30% to 40% on all export receipts, effective January 2021.

He also said the Monetary Policy Committee resolved to maintain the liquidatio­n requiremen­t for domestic foreign exchange sales at 20% net of sales tax. These measures were maintained in the MPS.

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