How Taxes on Airtime, Data Will Affect You
Excise
taxes on airtime and data are set to go up from 15 to 20 percent — allowing the
taxman to collect at least Sh8 billion in extra revenues from Safaricom, Airtel
and Telkom Kenya.
This move will hit the consumers of airtime
and data hard in the pocket especially in view of the fact that the consumer of
mobile telephone services also bear the burden of paying VAT that is levied at
16 percent.
Simply put, it means that if as a consumer you
buy airtime or mobile data of an amount of Sh100 a whole Sh36 will go to the
government in the form of taxes.
Clearly, mobile telephone users will be paying
some of the highest taxes on the land.
Two policy questions arise: what is the
primary purpose of taxation? Merely to collect more money for the government or
to enable the achievement of good in society?
What if, in stubbornly insisting on collecting
more revenues, the taxman unwittingly finds himself hurting citizens, companies
and the broader macroeconomy?
But what should be of more concern to us is
the indiscriminate manner in which the taxman has been expanding the sin tax
list. Do airtime and data deserve to be treated as sin taxes?
Is it fair to tax consumption of airtime and
mobile data at the same level as taxing consumption of goods of ostentation
such as perfumes, whisky, and mineral water?
These are pertinent questions because
historically, excise taxes in Kenya were levied on the domestic production of
only four products — namely cigarettes, sugar, beer, spirits, and matches.
It all made sense to restrict excise duties to
these four products because —as we read in theory — excise taxes are increased
to discourage consumption of products deemed to be harmful to the health and the morality of the consumer.
As we all agree, consumption of cigarettes,
excessive drinking of beer, brandy, or gin is deemed to be harmful not only to
the individual consuming the product but also to society at large.
Excessive drinking is associated with many
social maladies, including alcoholism and road accidents. I don’t see the
connection between these perennial upwards adjustments on excise duties on
airtime and mobile data and discouraging consumption of potentially harmful
products.
Enough of theory. Why do I maintain that
raising excise taxes on mobile phones and airtime is a wrong-headed policy?
First, it could cause a reversal in the gains
the country has made in expanding financial inclusion.
Indeed, the progress we have made in financial
inclusion in this country has mainly been driven by the entry of the mobile phone into the financial services ecosystem.
Do we, really, want to reverse the phenomenal
gains we have made in terms of expanding financial inclusion?
With the constant upward revision of excise
taxes on airtime and data, shouldn’t we be worried that we may be sending the
wrong message to the mobile user: that the intention is to discourage the use of
mobile phone services?
Our own experience has amply demonstrated that
consumers of mobile telephone services respond to tax incentives.
In June 2009, the government, recognizing the
importance of access to mobile telephony, exempted handsets from VAT. The
result was a phenomenal increase in handset purchases.
This brings me to the second reason why I
maintain that this latest increase in excise duty on airtime and data is
wrongheaded.
Methinks that the taxman is running out of
ideas on how to expand and broaden tax bases and that are why he is resorting to
tinkering with excise taxes on mobile phone services because airtime and data
are easy prey.
The taxman goes for the easy target because,
administratively, excise duty on airtime and mobile data are easy to collect.
All that the taxman does is sit back and wait to collect cheques from a few
large companies — Safaricom, Airtel, and Telkom Kenya.
This opinion was written by JAINDI KISERO, former Nation Media Group Managing Editor for Business and Economic Affairs, and a columnist for the Daily Nation and Business Daily.
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