Business

Kenya calls for input on tax policies

Friday, July 15th, 2022 08:00 | By

The National Treasury has called on businesses and individuals to have their say on a policy document that will inform how taxes should be restructured in the country.

In a policy paper which requested views on the revision of Kenya’s revenue system, the finance office noted that it wants to understand how present policy measures shape investment decisions by businesses.

The national tax policy seeks to expand the tax base to boost fairness and equity in the tax system as well as embrace the international best practice in tax administration.

Further, the draft policy is also meant to create a semblance of certainty and predictability of the tax regime, enhance tax compliance, and reduce tax expenditure.

Unpredictable taxes

“This National Tax Policy provides policy recommendations to address the challenges currently facing the taxation regime in the country such as huge informal sector that is hard to tax, the unpredictability of tax policies, huge tax expenditure poor compliance among others,” noted Treasury CS Ukur Yatani in a statement that advised views must be submitted by August 5.

This even as changes in taxes on smartphones and SIM cards are set to hurt Kenyans as the Finance Act 2022 was signed by President Uhuru Kenyatta in June. The move has seen players like mobile operator Safaricom start the implementation of Sh50 excise duty on SIM cards and a 10 per cent excise tax on imported phones as part of the move.

Challenges

“Effective today, Safaricom will be reviewing their SIM card pricing to Sh50 + Sh50 airtime first top up to include the excise tax. Phone prices will be adjusted to include the 10 per cent excise tax and 25 per cent import duty as existing stock levels are replaced with new stock on which the new taxes apply,” reads in part Safaricom’s notice to its consumers.

The country’s tax system notoriously continues to suffer numerous challenges leading to underperformance in revenue collection with Kenyans painstakingly the most taxed.

Kenya ranked third after South Africa and Swaziland as top African countries where individuals pay more tax than profit taxes from corporations, according to a report by Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).

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