Museveni says social media is a luxury and must be taxed, meanwhile mobile money tax shall be revised
President Museveni has finally spoken out on on the OTT tax levied on
social media users. He has stated that social media is a luxury while Mobile
Money tax was a miscommunication. This means that the the daily Shs200 on
social media is here to stay while the 1% excise duty tax levied on all mobile
money transactions will be subject to a review.
Here is the president’s full statement.
Dear Ugandans,
Greetings. I am using social media to share with you the reasons for the social-media tax and the mobile money tax.
Greetings. I am using social media to share with you the reasons for the social-media tax and the mobile money tax.
Our budget for this financial year is
Ug.Sh 32 trillion. The taxes collected from within Uganda and the other fees
for this financial year will be Ug.sh.17.5 trillion. The balance (the
difference) is handled by borrowing from outside the country, Ug.Sh 8.3
trillion, as well as borrowing from within the country, Sh 7 trillion. We,
then, also get grants from outside to the tune of Sh280bn i.e 0.28 trillions.
Why do we have to borrow or beg from
outside or even borrow from within? We do so because many people who are
supposed to pay tax do not pay the tax. How do we know this? We know this by
using the standard measurement used all over the World. This is the GDP: tax
ratio. This means the amount of taxes paid compared to the size of the GDP, the
size of the economy.
In 1991, it was only 4% of GDP. When we
formed the URA, it rose to 12% and it has stagnated there for a long time. Last
financial year it rose to 14.2%. In other countries in Europe, the GDP: tax
ratio is 30% or more. The avarage GDP: tax ratio in Africa is 18% . Why is the
GDP: tax ratio in Uganda so low? The following are the reasons:
(a) telephone companies have been
under-declaring calls until recently when we acquired machines to see the
telephone calls ourselves. Big shame to the culprits;
(b) Many of the people who should be paying taxes of incomes from rent do not pay or underpay;
(c) Many citizens are still in subsistence agriculture (okukolera olubuto kyokka, Itiyo pi ikeni ) and informal sector (juakali) and I always oppose taxes on those sectors (gonja roasters, mchomo sellers, mechanics, carpenters etc); in any case, it is difficult to know how much they earn;
(d) Absence of scanners on the borders allows false declarations of goods in containers. The URA now has 4 scanners only. I have directed them to buy enough scanners to cover all entry points by land, water and air; and
(e) Slowness in introducing electronic stamps to the goods imported from outside at the factory level.
(b) Many of the people who should be paying taxes of incomes from rent do not pay or underpay;
(c) Many citizens are still in subsistence agriculture (okukolera olubuto kyokka, Itiyo pi ikeni ) and informal sector (juakali) and I always oppose taxes on those sectors (gonja roasters, mchomo sellers, mechanics, carpenters etc); in any case, it is difficult to know how much they earn;
(d) Absence of scanners on the borders allows false declarations of goods in containers. The URA now has 4 scanners only. I have directed them to buy enough scanners to cover all entry points by land, water and air; and
(e) Slowness in introducing electronic stamps to the goods imported from outside at the factory level.
We, therefore, end up getting revenue
from consumer taxes on mainly luxuries; income tax; profit tax; and import tax
on consumables minus the production inputs only. That is why we end up with the
low GDP: tax ratio of only 14.2% and have to borrow or beg, yet our economy is
growing.
Coming specifically to the social media
and mobile money taxes, Ugandans need to ask the following questions:
1. Do you send social media messages to Facebook or whatever for free or do you pay?
2. Do you send mobile money for free or do you pay?
3. If you pay, whom do you pay?
4. Do you pay in dollars or in local shillings?
5. If you pay in local shillings, do the ones you pay, most of whom are foreign companies, take money out of Uganda in local shillings or in dollars?
6. If it is dollars, who earned those dollars?
1. Do you send social media messages to Facebook or whatever for free or do you pay?
2. Do you send mobile money for free or do you pay?
3. If you pay, whom do you pay?
4. Do you pay in dollars or in local shillings?
5. If you pay in local shillings, do the ones you pay, most of whom are foreign companies, take money out of Uganda in local shillings or in dollars?
6. If it is dollars, who earned those dollars?
Let us answer the last question first.
Those dollars are earned by us who produce coffee, tea, the milk products, by
our gold, by our tourism, by our processed fish , by our manufactured goods
(e.g cement, textiles, soap, mattresses, cooking oil, etc).
Therefore, some of us, myself included,
either earn the dollars or save the dollars by producing products instead of
importing them, but some of our countrymen donate those dollars back to the
foreigners by chatting endlessly on the social media. Is this correct or fair?
Is it good for our country?
Mobile money transfer is, of course,
different from the social media chatting. Social media chatting is a luxury by
those who are enjoying themselves or those who are malicious.
Mobile money transfer, on the other
hand, is a useful service. Since the informal sector (juakali, mchomo selling
etc) is never taxed and I am always against those direct taxes on those
sectors, is it too much for users of the mobile money senders and receivers to
also make a modest contribution to the development of their country? The 1% was
a miscommunication. The actual figure was 0.5%, half of one percent. That is
what we should debate, on the mobile money.
As to social- media tax, all the moral
reasons are in favour of that tax. The social – media users have no right to
squander the dollars I earn from my coffee , my milk etc by endlessly donating
money to foreign telephone companies through chatting or even lying and, then,
they are allergic to even a modest contribution to their country whose
collective wealth they are misusing.
The same with those who engage in games
betting. They bet in local shillings. Since, however, our economy is an open
one, the foreign owners of betting machines rush to the forex bureaus, buy
dollars, the ones I earned , so as to externalize them. This is what affects
our shilling.
The importers of foreign luxury goods-
wines, whiskies, artificial hair, furniture, textiles, shoes etc, goods that
can be made here, also squander our dollars. Fortunately, on account of our
campaigns, the import bill has decreased from US$ 7 billion to US$ 5 billion.
That is not enough, however.
There are no taxes on agricultural
products, no taxes on machinery for factories or agricultural machinery , no
taxes on raw- materials , no taxes on scholastic materials, no taxes on
medicine, no tax on exports, no graduated tax etc. Most of the inputs in wealth
and job creation are not taxed because we want people to engage in production.
The essentials are never taxed.
This is to clarify that there is no tax
on mere depositing of money on a mobile phone account. That confusion should be
clarified. The half -percent tax, not 1 percent, is only on the sender and the
receiver of money through mobile money. Discuss this.
I congratulate our Science team for
demonstrating that we now have the eyes to see all the goings on in the
telecommunication and financial services. No more games.
This capacity will be extended to deal
with the criminal pigs that have made it a hobby to kill Ugandans. They will
pay. I am, however, interested in a rational and honest dialogue, especially on
the half -percent tax on mobile money sending and receiving.
Signed
Yoweri Kaguta Museveni.
Yoweri Kaguta Museveni.
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