Monday, December 23, 2013
Parliament waives out SIM card tax, approves communication service tax
THE National Assembly on Saturday last week approved
the amendment of the Cap No: 147 of the Excise Management and Tariff
(amendment) Bill 2013 which was tabled in the house by deputy minister for
Finance Saada Mkuya. The Bill was proposed by the government in a bid to waive
out the monthly SIM Card tax of Sh. 1,000 as approved earlier in July this year
during parliamentary budget session for 2013/14 financial year. This follows
claims by the electronic communication companies and users of cell phones in
the country most of whom are the poorest who could not afford the proposed
monthly amount of money to be paid in Tanzania shillings as tax as it is too
expensive according to the capacity of their usage. Alongside with this
amendment, the parliament has also approved the amendment of the provision No.
124, clause (6c) of the Excise Management Act, which has increased taxes to be charged
on the electronic communication services from 14.5 percent to 17 percent
respectively. Under the system proposed, the deputy finance minister noted that
this would enable every user of the electronic communications services in the
country to pay such tax according to the capacity of his or her usage. However,
minister Saada noted that, the system would effectively start in January 2014. According to Saada, whoever uses more services
will pay more, and those who limits their uses will also pay less. However, she
clarified without analyzing how the rates of payments would be manifested in
the financial debt transactions. She said, the system has been coordinated to
favor the poor especially rural dwellers and will be contrary the earlier
system which had proposed a uniform rate of payment for every user without
considering the rate of each one’s capacity of usage. The decision by Parliament was reached after
a short debate over the issue whereby some legislators blamed the government
for having delayed the money which the communication companies were supposed to
pay immediately when the Bill was first passed by house in July this year. Some
legislators blamed the government in the whole process of making their
proposals saying that, stakeholders in the electronic communication industry
were not involved in the process. Saleha Pamba (CCM) noted that, it was prudent
to include all communication companies in this process before coming into a
decision over the matter in Parliament. He said and called onm fellow law
makers to do what he termed as political ground work in order to have
transparency on the matter for Tanzanians. He said that, the earlier proposed
SIM card tax rate was so expensive in comparison with what is being charged by
other East African Community member states. A nominated ;legislator
(NCCR-Mageuzi) James Mbatia openly noted that, the amendment of the Bill has
some sort of cheatings in the sense that it shows that, there are some
government executives who are not
working with efficiency. He queries the rationale of the government to bring
back its own bill which it had proposed and later approved, now it should have
been amended an aspect there might have caused some losses incurred on the part
of the implementation.
In view of this however, he has advised the
government to hire money for the development for the time being while the taxes
are being prepared in a short while. Mwigulu Mchemba (CCM) than ked the
government to have listened its people when it has decided to waive out the tax
saying that, it would help the poor who had become psychologically affected
when the announcements were made in July this year. However, he has insisted
that, tax payments for the local people is important for their country’s
development and it is therefore necessary to implement it as it is the nation
which benefits. In July this year, the government had allocated billions of
shillings for the development of rural electrification in the country, and part
of the allocated money was directed to be contributed by electronic communication
companies through monthly SIM card taxation. The decision by the government had
later on caused a mutual of understanding between the government and the
company’s owners who saw it impracticable for fear of losing customers in the
local market. Under the system, all electronic communication companies were
ordered to pay a monthly tax of Sh. 178.4 billion, the money which has never
been collected since the Act was passed by the house six months ago. The
resistances over the payments followed a controversy which had arisen between
the government and the communication business companies who resort to seek for
a solution before the court of law. Likewise the stakeholders and the public in
general especially users of cell phones were nlot happy by the government’s
decision and raised claims that, the amount of money was so great and not
affordable.
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