News: Transparency,Help us collect our taxes — African MPs
Children
with gourd bowls in Thiekthou, Sudan. Calls for transparency in tax
administration: Africa is losing tax revenues equivalent up to twice the
amount it gets in aid. UN Photo/Eskinder Debebe / CC BY-NC-ND
Multinational corporations doing business in Africa are finding it all
too easy to circumvent taxation — and that loss of tax revenue just
makes countries even more dependent on foreign aid.
Stemming
from underdeveloped tax administration systems, tax avoidance is one of
the biggest obstacles toward achieving transparency as a catalyst for
development in the continent, Tanzanian MP Zitto Kabwe told Devex.
Africa is losing $50 billion every year from illicit financial flows,
while at the same time receiving around $30 billion in foreign aid. That
means Africa is losing out on tax revenues equivalent to almost twice
the amount it gets in official development assistance from overseas,
noted the deputy opposition leader and shadow finance minister.
Kabwe is one of 10 African experts on a fact-finding mission to look at
tax and transparency issues in Europe. Organized by the European
Network on Debt and Development, the initiative is taking the experts —
among them several MPs — to discuss national taxation issues and
challenges with representatives of EU member state governments, the
United Nations, the Organization for Economic Co-operation and
Development, EU institutions and civil society groups in Brussels,
London, Oslo and Paris.
“We are here in the developed world to
engage with various organizations, discuss and present our [side] of the
story, in order to get their views on how some of these problems can be
addressed,” explained Malawian MP McJones Mandala Shaba.
Transparency
African countries see the issue of improved tax revenues as part of a
long-term strategy to become less dependent on foreign aid. But
multinational corporations need to be willing to change their ways and
start paying taxes, the MPs asserted. For that to happen, they
explained, help would be required from the governments of the countries
in which these companies are based.
“If developed countries
support us in our effort to ensure we don’t lose our own revenues, we
won’t need foreign aid and we’ll have a partnership of equal footing,
rather than the donor-recipient relationship that has lasted more than
50 years,” Kabwe noted. “We just need our taxes: companies must come,
invest in Africa, get their profits, but pay their taxes in Africa. Once
we have our own revenues, we’ll be able to finance our development,
we’ll build our schools, facilities, infrastructures, pay our teachers
well, and have a good health system.”
But how can this goal be met? With more transparency, argue the MPs.
First of all, explained Mandala Shaba, donor governments should demand
that multinational corporations report the profits they make in the
country where “real economic activities take place,” not only in the
country where the headquarters is located.
Kabwe agreed with
Tax Justice Network senior analyst Marcus Meinzer, who recently
suggested to Devex that the main issues to tackle illicit financial
flows concern transparency of ownership (concerning shell companies and
trusts registered and created in the EU on behalf of residents of
developing countries), better exchange of financial account-related tax
information, and transparency of multinational corporations’ annual
accounts.
“I totally agree with his analysis. In a country like
Tanzania, minerals exported over a period of 10 years were valued at
$11.3 billion, but the taxes paid were around $440 million, less than 4
percent of the total. A similar situation [occurred] in Zambia … It
clearly shows how transparency in the accounts is crucial for the
extractives industry,” said the lawmaker.
Information access
Kabwe argued that the first step to assess, monitor and prevent
incoherence is to set up a system of automatic exchange of information.
“Various initiatives [have been undertaken] by the EU and the OECD to
set a convection of mutual exchange of information. I call on developing
countries, especially African countries, to sign up to this convention.
Signing it is the first step to have access to information,
automatically or by request.”
He added that a global
intergovernmental body is also needed to provide rules and guidelines,
and a system implementing a single convention on tax avoidance.
“Having one single convention, ratified by all countries of the world,
would be easier and even sanctions could [imposed] to countries that are
not providing information.”
Archaic legal framework
However, the tax administration in Africa lacks the capacity to come up
with specific legislation that would ensure “getting as much as
possible” from the investments of multinational companies, pointed out
Mandala Shaba.
“One of the challenges we face … is that we have outdated, odd and archaic legal policy frameworks and legislation.”
He gave the example of Malawi’s mines and mineral act, enacted almost
40 years ago, but never reviewed since to be brought more in line with
current social economic developments.
“Companies are taking
advantages of this particular aspect. We should come up with an
appropriate legal framework, which would guide the management of natural
resources, in particular mines.”
Corruption
On tax
issues in Africa, there is almost always the same elephant in the room:
corruption, in the form of powerful bureaucrats who appropriate revenues
from natural resources and hide the money abroad in tax havens.
“We recognize that corruption in most African countries is like the way
of life — corruption in the street with the traffic police, all the way
to the top executives and politicians,” said Kabwe.
A solution to address the problem, he argued, would be to bring the fight to offshore tax havens.
“Corrupt money needs a place to hide, so we have to create an
environment where if you are corrupt you don’t have any place to hide …
so that corrupt politicians have less incentives to engage in stealing.”
Kabwe mentioned that another solution is to establish accountability
mechanisms — ways of holding everybody responsible through the actions
they commit, while ensuring that the citizens are empowered to inform on
acts of corruption.
Both solutions would be music to the taxman’s ears.
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By Eva Donelli via zitto kabwe facebook page.
20 November 2013
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