It is estimated that Ghana loses around S2.27 billion every year in corporate tax incentives granted multinational businesses.
This amount is three times the country's budget allocation to the health sector.
According to a new report published yesterday by ActionAid and Tax
Justice Network-Africa (TJN-A), the negative impacts of corporate tax
incentives include giving undue advantages to big firms and
multinationals at the expense of smaller and domestic industries.
It said the development also promotes corruption by enabling special treatment to be given to specific companies
The report said West African countries are losing an estimated
US$9.6 billion of revenue each year by granting tax incentives to
foreign companies.
The report noted that three countries - Ghana, Nigeria and Senegal -
are losing an estimated $5.8 billion a year through the granting of
corporate tax incentives.
It stated that Ghana loses around $2.27 billion, Nigeria around $2.9 billion, and Senegal up to $638.7 million.
If the rest of ECOWAS lost revenues at similar percentages of their
GDP, total revenue losses among the 15 ECOWAS states would amount to
$9.6 billion a year.
It stated that West African governments provide corporate tax
incentives, including tax breaks and holidays, in the belief that they
attract foreign investment, which will in turn create jobs, but the
report states that this belief is both unfounded and harmful.
Tax Justice Network- Africa's Executive Director, Alvin Mosioma said
extractive companies would invest with or without tax incentives.
Unlike manufacturing, the extractives sector does not employ a large local workforce.
The report, entitled West African Giveaway, states that while there
has been increased foreign investment in the region, it is largely due
to the presence of natural resources like oil and diamond, "the natural
resources that West Africa has are rare and valuable."
The tragic irony, Mosioma said, is that "foreign companies do not
consider tax incentives to be an important factor for investment; they
would prefer good infrastructure, such as reliable roads and
electricity." Tax pays for the provision and maintenance of roads and
electricity, as well as healthcare and education.
The report calls for West African governments to review the tax
incentives they are granting with a view to abolishing all unproductive
incentives.
Any incentive that is determined to be effective should be targeted
at achieving specific social and economic objectives that benefit West
African citizens.
The report further states that the Economic Community of West
African States (ECOWAS) must establish a regional framework for
corporate tax incentives. Currently, the countries of the region are
competing for foreign investment by offering increasingly bigger tax
incentives, resulting in a 'race to the bottom'.
Senegal continues to increase corporate tax incentives for firms
operating in the country's free trade zones, but employment has failed
to increase in these areas.
Cote d'lvoire offers 50% tax exemptions to any firm willing to
invest in regions outside of Abidjan, yet unemployment rates remain
very high throughout the country and youth unemployment continues to
threaten social cohesion.
According to Ojobo Atuluku, ActionAid Nigeria's country director,
"Each year, governments of West Africa arc forfeiting billions of
dollars in revenue that is needed to improve education, healthcare and
infrastructure, and they arc doing so without any evidence that tax
incentives actually work.
"In fact, as our report shows, there is a considerable body of
information showing that tax incentives do not result in foreign
investment and the subsequent creation of jobs."
Atuluku sites Nigeria as an example, adding that, "the government of
Nigeria grants $2.9 billion a year in tax incentives to foreign
companies.
"This is more than the federal education budget and twice the budget allocated for health.
"And yet the companies that receive these incentives employ only
about 7,000 people. There are 30 million young people alone looking for
work in Nigeria. Seven thousand is a mere drop in the bucket.
"The situation we have right now is one in which everyone in West
Africa is losing," said Atuluku. "But it is the people living in
poverty, in particular the women and children, who are the most
affected".
Source: The Finder
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