TCS to modernise, automate taxation system in Zambia

 

TCS to modernise, automate taxation system in Zambia

 

29 July 2013

Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), India’s largest IT services provider, today announced that it has won a three year contract from the Zambia Revenue Authority (ZRA) for the modernisation of its domestic tax system. The financial details of the deals were not disclosed. This is TCS’ third revenue and tax system automation project in the African region after an implementation for Uganda Revenue Authority and ongoing implementation for Kenya Revenue Authority. The scope of the project includes providing an integrated tax software application based on TCS’ taxation framework, taxpayer 24/7 portal for e-services delivery, data migration, training, roll-out, warranty and operational support.

Tanmoy Chakrabarty, Vice President & Global Head, Government Industry Solutions Unit, TCS said, “The taxation project is all about service delivery transformation through a technology-led, service oriented approach. The new TCS tax framework will help Zambian government offer world class delivery of taxation services to its citizens as well as provide an effective monitoring system for its tax officials.”

Zambia Revenue Authority, as part of its tax reforms and modernisation programme, has engaged TCS to provide an integrated and multi-tax system covering VAT, Income Tax, Pay-As-You-Earn, Presumptive Tax, Turnover Tax, Mineral Royalty Tax, Excise, Property Transfer Tax, Medical Levy and Withholding Tax. Once operational, this system is expected to transform the service delivery to taxpayers, support the country’s sixth National Development Plan and assist ZRA to better control and monitor operations as well as prevent and detect potential revenue leakages. Further, the new system is also expected to bring about a higher degree of accountability and transparency to the public

For TCS this will be the 25th tax framework projecy globally, it has done more than 15 tax framework implementations in India, seven in USA and two in Africa. 

 

Source: Business Standard

Too many tax avoidance schemes in Africa

 

Too many tax avoidance schemes in Africa

 

26 July 2013

There are too many tax avoidance schemes being pursued by taxpayers in Africa, with Value Added Tax (VAT) being the most vulnerable, Anthony Ewereko Minlah, Commissioner of the Support Services Division at the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA), has observed.

“Across Africa, there is low willingness to pay tax by taxpayers and therefore there are always attempts by corporate bodies and individuals to either evade or avoid the payment of tax, and VAT is the most vulnerable,” Mr. Minlah told 35 tax auditors from 11 African countries at the opening ceremony of the African Tax Administrators Forum (ATAF) in Accra.

 

The event, which is being held on the topic “Auditing in VAT Systems”, aims to expand the current knowledge of participants on how to detect and deter non-compliant taxpayers by carrying out effective, efficient and quality risk-based audits on VAT systems, as well as improving the efficacy of the tax legislation and administrations among African nations. Mr. Minlah observed that it is unfortunate that voluntary tax compliance rates in Africa continue to be among the lowest in the world.

“Our challenges as tax administrators in Africa are many. We all know it is not easy to build effective systems in Africa, but at the same instance we need the tax income for development,” he said.

“We believe that with greater support from our taxpayers we can do more. Our taxpayers must cultivate the culture of voluntary compliance to ensure improved revenue. The GRA for the past three years exceeded its revenue targets due to great support from the government and our development partners, like German Agency for International Cooperation, Ghanaian Community Network, and some good corporate bodies.”

 

ATAF was set up in 2009 to promote and facilitate mutual cooperation among African tax administrations and other relevant and interested stakeholders. The forum brings together heads of African tax administrations and their representatives to discuss the progress made, challenges faced, and possible new direction for African tax policy and administration in the 21st century.

 

Source: Business and Financial Times

Kenya: Kenya Revenue Authority closes in on tax evaders

 

Kenya: Kenya Revenue Authority closes in on tax evaders

 

July 23 2013

The noose is tightening around tax evaders. This comes as Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) plans to install enhanced Electronic Tax Register (ETRs) machines by end December.

KRA Commissioner-General John Njiraini said the project to implement remote transmission of ETRs data has commenced and will be complete by end of the year.

He was speaking at the releasing the agency’s revenue performance results for the 2012/13. The move spells high noon for unscrupulous traders who have been exploiting the manual systems to falsify monthly tax returns.

The taxman is developing a system that links taxpayers’ transactions at the point of sale or in business outlets to a database in real time.

The project, however, means businesspeople will have to incur more costs to acquire new machines or modify them to be compatible to the new system. “The process will enable effective monitoring of ETRs to track usage, disconnection and locality, among others,” Njiraini said. “The initiative will capture data on buyers for the purpose of implementing customers’ loyalty programme.

This is one of the key strategies we will pursue the financial year to enhance revenue collection.” ETR machines were introduced in 2004. Traders were supposed to install the machines to enable them charge VAT on goods.

Traders were to source the machines from certified suppliers and then demand the cost of the machine as an expense from the taxman.  The process was later muddled with fake supplies. Unscrupulous traders made it difficult for the taxman to implement the reforms.

 

Source: Standard Media

Somalia: A new, dangerous job in Mogadishu: tax collector

 

Somalia: A new, dangerous job in Mogadishu: tax collector

 

July 29, 2013

MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP) — The Somali traders in Mogadishu’s markets have long faced down Islamist rebels and warlords demanding money. Now they say there is a new predator: the government tax man. Militias extorted cash from civilians during much of the last two decades of chaos. Now Mogadishu has a government in place, but shopkeepers view the taxman as the latest in a long line of troublemakers. That makes tax collection one of the riskier jobs in Mogadishu: Five tax collectors have been killed so far this year, following the killings of 10 last year, according to the director of Mogadishu’s municipal council, Abdullahi Artan.

“In some places, if you go without security escorts you’re going to take risks,” said Ali Haji, a tax collector. “Some of my colleagues were killed because of their work. Very many people don’t like our work.”

 

The idea of paying taxes for social services seems outlandish in a nation where few have seen functioning hospitals or schools. But if the Somali government is ever to wean itself off foreign aid and provide social services to its people, the taxman will have to persuade business leaders to pay their part. On a recent day in Mogadishu’s Hamarweyne market, the taxman was having a tough time. Sweating while carrying a plastic bag for cash deposits, he asked one shopkeeper after another to pay up. Many ignored him. But a soldier escorting the tax man threatened an immediate closure of the business if the tax was not paid.

“I haven’t earned any money since I came here in the morning, so I can’t pay,” one woman murmured as the tax collector walked away. Few willingly paid.

 

Between 2006 and 2011, Mogadishu was controlled by the Islamic extremist group al-Shabab, and business owners were forced to play by the rebels’ tax rules. Following al-Shabab’s ouster in August 2011, a fragile peace has fallen over the city, allowing new construction and business opportunities. Government tax collectors began work for the first time as tax evasion remains high.

“They consider me to be a bandit. They don’t want to get taxed,” said Mohamed Nor, another tax collector for Mogadishu’s municipal government, as he stacked bundles of money into a black plastic bag. Because it takes 2 million Somali shillings to equal $100, tax collectors have to carry around large bundles of bills. “Some are willing to pay, but you still have lawless lovers rejecting to pay it.”

 

One obstacle tax collectors face is philosophical: If it’s an established fact that government leaders in Somalia steal tax money, why should citizens pay? A report this month by the United Nations Monitoring Group on Somalia and Eritrea said that 80 percent of withdrawals from Somalia’s Central Bank are made for private purposes, indicating it is operating as a patronage system for members of government. It said that of $16.9 million transferred to the Central Bank last year, $12 million could not be accounted for.

“They just collect money that ends up in their pockets,” said Sahra Farah, a fuel trader, while looking at a taxman leaving the market.

 

The daily tax collections are not assessed based on a percentage of sales, but are merely payments toward an annual $135 business permit. That comes to about 25 cents a day, though traders say that price can rise to 40 cents a day, depending on how corrupt a given tax collector may be.

“The amount you pay depends on the tax collector of the day,” Mohamed Abukar said at his shop in Mogadishu. “Some shops pay fixed annual money, but some pay on daily basis. There’s no proper regulation.”

 

Artan, the director of the municipal council, said that some business owners buy forged business licenses to avoid paying the yearly $135 fee. “Taxing is really challenging here because some people don’t want law and order,” Artan said. The U.N. report this month looked at many of the ways progress in Somalia is held back by corruption, which the report said is “embedded in all layers of society.” Large-scale theft of government funds takes place at the Central Bank and Mogadishu’s port. The country’s nascent oil sector is at risk of corruption woes. Corruption is so pervasive that it will be difficult to stop, said Abdi Aynte, the director of a Mogadishu think tank called The Heritage Institute for Policy Studies. He said the government must institute an anti-corruption commission that has powers to investigate and must enact policies that encourage transparency and accountability.

“Corruption has become corrosive and part of the culture in this country,” Aynte said. “Citizens are unable to receive government services and even private services without bribing someone.”

 

 

Source: Associated Press, Nairobi, Kenya.

Mobile Money Market to Reach $278.9 Billion by 2018

 

Mobile Money Market to Reach $278.9 Billion by 2018

 

July 29 2013

Dallas, TX, According to a new market research report “Mobile Money Market: (Mobile Payments, Mobile Remittance, Mobile Banking & Mobile Commerce) – Advanced Technologies, Value Chain, Adoption Trends & Worldwide Market Forecasts (2013–2018)”, are forecasted with detailed segmentation: based on the transaction mode ( NFC/ Smart cards, Direct operator billing, Mobile Web / WAP, SMS and others), based on payment location ( Remote payments, Proximity payments), Based on nature of Payments ( Person to Person (P2P), Person to Business (P2B), Business to Person (B2P), Business to Business (B2B) and based on type of purchases (Air time transfers & Top Ups, Money Transfers and Mobile Payments, Merchandise & coupons, Travel Ticketing & Food, Digital products purchases).

Browse:

– 112 Market Data Tables
– 61 Figures
– 272 Pages and In-Depth Table of Content on “Mobile Money Market”

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The mobile phones, which are seen as the device for the upper crust is changed and the number of mobile phones is expected to surpass the world’s population in the coming years. The Ubiquity of mobile phones and the major chunk of people who have no formal access to banks are the key drivers for the Mobile Money market. Mobile Money will offer a rewarding opportunity in terms of revenue for the people in its ecosystem both in the near future and over the long term. While talking about its ecosystem, it constitutes of many industries such as mobile network operators, banks and financial institutions, payment processors, mobile money platform providers, handset manufacturers, etc. because of its fragmented nature of the market.

The report also discusses the total Mobile Payments in terms of transaction value, total mobile money users and the active mobile money users forecast trends. The mobile transaction value is segmented based on industry verticals such as Banking and Financial Services, Telecommunicaiton, Media and Entertainment, Hospitality, Consumer Goods & Retail and Other verticals. MarketsandMarkets also forecasted the Installed base and unit shipments for NFC enabled devices over the period of 2013 -2018. The global Advancements, Business Models, Drivers, Restraints and Opportunities are also presented in the report.

Mobile Money Market is expected to grow from $13.8 billion in 2013 to $278.9 billion by 2018, at an estimated CAGR of 82.4% over the same period.

About MarketsandMarkets

MarketsandMarkets is a global market research and consulting company based in the U.S. We publish strategically analyzed market research reports and serve as a business intelligence partner to Fortune 500 companies across the world.

MarketsandMarkets also provides multi-client reports, company profiles, databases, and custom research services. MarketsandMarkets covers thirteen industry verticals, including advanced materials, automotive and transportation, banking and financial services, biotechnology, chemicals, consumer goods, energy and power, food and beverages, industrial automation, medical devices, pharmaceuticals, semiconductor and electronics, and telecommunications and IT.

We at MarketsandMarkets are inspired to help our clients grow by providing apt business insight with our huge market intelligence repository.

Tanzania: Tax Compliance Assured As EFDs Come Into Effect

 

Tanzania: Tax Compliance Assured As EFDs Come Into Effect

 

1 January 2014

The regulation that requires all business people with an annual turnover of above 14m/- to instal an Electronic Fiscal Device (EFD) comes into effect today. Non-compliers by February 1, 2014 risk prosecution and a maximum one-year jail sentence. Acting Finance Minister Saada Mkuya Salum said in Dar es Salaam that the December 31, 2013 deadline is over and that those resisting the new government move risk being penalised. She cautioned business people who are still planning to boycott use of the devices that in doing so they will be violating the law and may also be prosecuted.

“We are through with bargaining and sensitisation. Now it’s time for action,” Ms Salum said as businesses in Mwanza reportedly closed shops protesting the EFD introduction.

 

She said effective February 1, defaulters will be given 14 and seven days of grace period before a penalty of 5-10 per cent is imposed on gross turnover for period starting January 1, 2014.

“I urge business people to cooperate and avoid getting into confrontation with the state,” Ms Salum appealed. Deputy Finance Minister Janet Mbene urged local business people to feel proud of paying taxes, noting that many of them have been making millions of shillings in profit while never paying taxes. 

“We should reduce the burden of workers who seem to be the only main taxpayers,” Ms Mbene said. She hoped that the EFD machines will eliminate tax evasion and corruption, which has denied both the Treasury and the public revenue and public development project financing respectively. Those who want more time for sensitisation are just playing with time; why don’t people need sensitisation on how to use modern telecommunications gadgets such as iPads, android phones, etc,” Ms Mbene, who is on holiday, inquired.

 

She urged the public to rally behind the government’s initiative, which will not only help speed up development but also wean the country from donor dependence.
 
The Treasury had earlier pushed back the deadline for EFD introduction for businesses with over 14m/- turnover from November 15 to December 1, 2013. It also reduced the price of the gadgets from 800,000/- to between 600,000/- and 778,377/- each, according to brand model and capacity. The EFD gadgets, which were introduced in 2010 targeting traders with a turnover of 40m/- per annum, have so far been sold to close to 17,000 traders with an annual turnover of not less than 14m/-.

According to the authority, EFDs bear a fiscal seal, have special inbuilt Read Only Memory (ROM) and incorporate fiscal memory that cannot be erased by use of electromagnetic interface. They also keep 48-hour power back-up and can also use external battery in areas without electricity supply, among some of their unique characteristics. The system aims at allowing the taxman to get correct sales information from business people; reduce tax collection costs and helping business people to comply with the Value Added Tax (VAT) regulations, among others.

 
 
Source: allAfrica

Rwanda: RRA withdraws privileges from E-Billing Machine defaulters

 

Rwanda: RRA withdraws privileges from E-Billing Machine defaulters

 

2 January 2014

Rwanda Revenue Authority (RRA) announced the withdrawal of administrative privileges from all Value Added Tax registered taxpayers who did not comply with the first deadline of December 31, 2013 for acquisition of electronic billing machines. This came into force yesterday despite the deadline for owning the machines having been pushed from December 31, 2013 to March 31, 2014. Others who will be affected are those that will have not obtained exemption from electronic billing usage by RRA, as assessments continue.

“RRA will immediately withdraw administrative privileges formally granted to compliant taxpayers for those who will not have complied with the set deadline of December 3, 2013 for acquisition of Electronic billing machines and have not obtained exemption from its usage,” Drocelle Mukashyaka, the Deputy Commissioner for Taxpayer Services confirmed to The New Times.

 

On top of losing these services, traders who will not comply with the March 31 deadline will incur fines ranging between Rwf5 million and Rwf20 million. Mukashyaka said the privileges to be stripped off from non compliant e-billing machine taxpayers include; Quitus Fiscal, Blue Channel, Gold Card scheme and all instalment payments for taxes. Important as well, tax clearance certificates and statement of arrears will be stripped from non-compliant taxpayers participating in public tenders.

“The move is intended to enforce the maximum use of electronic billing machines by VAT registered taxpayers and discourage unscrupulous taxpayers that would engage in tax evasion by not issuing tax invoices to their clients using these machines,” she said.

 

RRA recently introduced a consumer compliance award aimed at encouraging buyers to ask for receipts and be rewarded with cash and prizes in weekly draws. Despite several calls by RRA urging traders to purchase and start using the machines, only about 800 taxpayers out of 10,000 are using the machines. While RRA argues that some taxpayers are deliberately not using electronic billing machines, several business owners around Kigali claim the machines, which cost between Rwf180,000 and Rwf450,000, are expensive to purchase.

The machines were introduced in February last year to facilitate the tax authorities in calculating VAT, while they also facilitate traders by recording stock.
 
 
Source: Newtimes, Rwanda

Tanzania: Mwanza traders condemn TRA

 

Tanzania: Mwanza traders condemn TRA

 

2 January 2014

Shops and other businesses in the city of Mwanza have reopened after three days of strike in a protest over what traders described as government institutions’ discrimination and ill-treatment of business people generally. The Mwanza Regional Administrative Secretary (RAS), Mr Ndallo Kulijila, told the ‘Daily News’ that the unrest came to an end after the Mwanza Regional Commissioner (RC) Eng. Evarist Ndikilo, met the businessmen and discussed their grievances.

“The RC and businessmen’s representatives sat in a meeting from 2:00 pm and concluded it at 20:00 pm. They discussed various factors that the business people viewed as impediments to their businesses and found a lasting solution,” said Kulijila.

 

He said that the major concern of the businessmen was the way TRA handles issue of the electronic Fiscal Device (EFDs). Most of the business people complained bitterly saying that they did not know for what use the gadgets were. Some said they did not know how to use them.
 
They asked the Regional Commissioner to instruct the TRA and its agencies to enlighten the business people on how to use the machines. According to the RAS, the business people also complained that some TRA officers often threatened them instead of using a friendly approach when discussing taxation matters. The other complaint from the business people was that when a trader pays import duty at Sirari on the Kenyan border, the same trader pays the same duty at Musoma and Mwanza.
 
This means some traders paid import duty for the same goods three times. Responding to the business people’s grievances, the Regional Commissioner ordered the TRA in Mwanza to provide education on the use of EFDs and instruct its members of staff not to threaten traders use a gentle public relations approach when dealing with them.
 
 
Source: Tanzania Daily News

Enabling the development of Africa by Africa through increased tax revenue

 

Enabling the development of Africa by Africa through increased tax revenue

 

8 June 2015

Over the years, African countries have been relying on international aid to finance their national budget and their development. Financial assistance from developed countries may have been justified at a given time, but its disadvantages now seem to outweigh its advantages. It was established that aid funds and revenue collection were inversely proportional and that, generally speaking, the Official Development Assistance was minimal compared to the resources of the countries that benefit from it.

This assessment of the foreign aid situation on the continent may have led Rwandan President Paul Kagame to state, at the opening of the 8th annual meeting of African Economy and Finance Ministers, that Africa should stop relying on developed countries for its development and should instead mobilize its own financial resources. Such a statement implies that the continent has the capacity to finance the greatest portion, if not all, of its development budget, which is indeed the case. National resources constitute the largest pool of funds available to developing countries, mostly through taxes, customs fees and the concession of natural resources.

According to a study presented during the meeting, internal taxes alone bring in more than US$520 billion to African governments each year. This figure may seem satisfactory, but the truth is, it could be a lot higher. Indeed, a great deal of improvement is still needed in terms of tax base in Africa. At 10 to 14% only, the contribution of the developing countries’ tax revenue to the GDP remains far below the 20% recommended by the OECD to allow the States to meet their development goals.

The sheer size of the informal sector and the illicit cash flows traveling from Africa to the other continents (up to US$800 billion per year to the World Bank) are to blame. Tax fraud currently deprives African governments of revenue that, on its own, would allow them to balance their budgets and to finance most of their expenses, while reducing both their debt and their dependence on foreign aid. Shockingly, If tax compliance was efficiently enforced in all African countries, the sum thus collected by the governments would represent 10 times the total aid budget for Africa (source: study by Forum Syd, 2012).

All tax fraudsters in Africa have something in common: they take advantage of the weaknesses of the existing tax systems, which are mostly paper-based. Of course, no country in the world can boast a non-existent level of tax fraud. However, a shift from the Paper Age to the Electronic Era is one of the non-negotiable conditions for truly effective taxation in Africa. In countries where electronic sales recording methods are widely used, the authorities can easily access the data they need to counter tax fraud more efficiently.

The provision of reliable, accurate and real-time tax-related data to the authorities concerned is one of the many advantages of the Electronic Fiscal Device (EFD) solution developed by Avatar Technologies for use in the retail sector. The collection of VAT and other taxes indeed remains problematic in this sector.

However, what really makes this solution stand out among other systems of its kind is the fact that it can be adapted to the environment of the different African countries. The EFDs that feed the transactional data to the central platform in real time are affordable, robust, as well as highly autonomous and resilient. Furthermore, the solution provides free access to a Cloud-based accounting application that greatly simplifies the management of invoices and inventories, as well as bookkeeping processes.

These features and characteristics make the solution attractive to traders, and easy for them to adopt, thus putting tax compliance within their reach. But even such an advanced solution will have limited benefits if the consumers omit to demand their receipt after making a purchase. That is why Avatar Technologies has equipped its EFD solution with a VAT lottery component, which automatically enters the customers who ask for a receipt into a lucky draw.  

By providing African tax authorities with the technological means to enforce tax compliance, and to make it both verifiable and controllable, Avatar’s EFD solution contributes to improving the fiscal performance of the States. The increased tax revenue can then be used to realize the vision of a financially independent Africa that is able to meet its own development needs.

Read the whole article: http://www.newsofrwanda.com/featured1/26969/paul-kagame-lafrique-ne-se-developpera-pas-avec-des-capitaux-etrangers-30032015/

 

Rwanda: E-Billing Machines – Traders Should Look to Long-Term Gains

 

Rwanda: E-Billing Machines – Traders Should Look to Long-Term Gains

 

3 January 2014

When Rwanda Revenue Authority (RRA) introduced electronic billing system in February last year, it was after assessing and weighing several pros against the cons of the system. The machines are to facilitate RRA in calculating VAT. It also facilitates traders by recording stock. The use of the machines is also in part to discourage unscrupulous taxpayers who would engage in tax evasion by not issuing tax invoices to their clients.
 
Like a trader already using the machine said, you will not be lining up at RRA offices to find out how much tax you owe the revenue body. The machine does that and you can know how much tax you owe after every transaction. What better deal could still be there than in embracing the digital future today? Unfortunately, it appears the majority of traders are apprehensive. Media reports indicate that only 800 out of 10,000 taxpayers are using the e-billing machines, forcing RRA to extend the deadline to March 31 to give them more time to adopt the machines.

Whereas being apprehensive would be appreciated considering that it is a new digital world traders are being told to walk into, some excuses smack of selfishness. It is true that a good trader is a tested miser, but to complain about paying for service of Rwf480,000 that would mint more advantages is taking one’s measly traits a tad too far. Traders ought to look beyond immediate returns. The machine is not like a single-use-only hardware, but will be used to serve interests it is designed for over time. To decry the current price of the e-billing machine is to think of it as some tissue paper, which is sad for the economy and the technological advancement government is trying to realise.
 
At the end of the day, even expecting RRA to give the machines free of charge is a long call; after all, no buyer walks to your warehouse to ask for free goods.
 
 
allAfrica