Tax matters are private, please stop discussing them in public

JavaScript is disabled!

Please enable JavaScript to read this content.

Meanwhile, the taxpayer continues to submit his or her returns annually, some in time, others late, without ever imagining that the late submissions were attracting penalties, which themselves were attracting interest.

Much later, say five years, the taxpayer is slapped with a demand notice for tax arrears running into hundreds of thousands of shillings!

The natural response is to either resign to fate or abandon that business and create a new one to continue with the business of the former. In most cases, such taxes became literally uncollectible.

The taxpayers did not have the money to pay the taxes. This is what I call "Ignorance Tax." The taxpayers are genuinely unaware of the existence of such tax arrears until much later.

Penalties

Similarly, there were taxpayers who had not submitted their returns at all. The practice then was to generate an Estimated Assessment. The Estimated Assessment would create a nominal tax in the taxpayer's ledger.

Unfortunately, such nominal tax is treated as a tax that is due and payable unless the taxpayer submits a return to replace the estimated one. Since the actual return would be late, there would have been generated penalties and interests that required a specific request for waiver.

Waiver of interests and penalties was done at the discretion of the Commissioner, and beyond a certain amount, the application would go to the Cabinet minister.

It would take months before a decision was made on the application for waiver of penalties and interests. In most cases, the Treasury would recommend a partial waiver. That means the taxpayer would be required to pay tax even when the subject return was nil.

All these and other encumbrances clogged the tax administration system and hampered its efficiency and effectiveness.

New Sheriff in town

Many Kenyans were caught up in this web of complex tax law and lethargic, conservative tax administration structures and practices.

The Tax Amnesty 2004 was, therefore, conceived to infuse confidence, efficiency, and effectiveness in the tax administration. It worked. The tax amnesty went hand-in-hand with revenue administration reforms and modernization program.

The program targeted revitalization of human resources, modernization of internal processes and creation of partnerships with taxpayers for a transparent, technology-driven and customer-focused tax administration.

Within one financial year, it was clear that there was a new Sheriff in town. Michael Waweru delivered for the Kibaki government and the Kenyan society at large.

President Mwai Kibaki himself was at the forefront of urging all Kenyans to pay their equitable share of taxes and set the country free. Hence the president's clarion call: "Tulipe Ushuru Tujisaidie."

Performing, KRA Commissioner-General Githii Mburu. [File, Stndard]

President Kibaki's idea was to enhance the mobilization of domestic resources to underwrite recurrent and development expenditures, thus reducing dependency on external financing for budgetary support.

At one point during the early years of the Kibaki regime, the country was able to reduce its external budgetary support to about 3 per cent, that is, Kenya was able to rely on its domestic financial resources to finance up to 97 per cent of its budget.

The country had regained its financial independence, national pride, and sovereignty. It can be done.

What was the big lesson that the country learnt from the Kibaki era fiscal management style? Taxation is not an exact science. The tax administration still relies, to a great extent, on the taxpayers' goodwill to voluntarily make full declarations and pay the taxes that are due in time.

In an economy that still relies heavily on cash transactions, it is difficult to trace all income sources and expenditures.

Gikomba traders

For example, the mtumba people of Gikomba and cattle dealers of Moyale, for the most part, conduct their transactions in cash, thus making traceability difficult.

To bring them to the tax net, the tax administration must first seek to understand their business models, and give them a reason to be part of the nation-building through tax compliance. The tax compliance continuum includes registration, filing, declaration, and payment. It is difficult to enforce tax compliance in a cash economy.

President William Ruto must lead his team in creating the requisite goodwill for Kenyans to improve on their civil responsibility, a key aspect of which is tax compliance.

The government might not achieve the envisaged voluntary tax compliance by adopting an adversarial approach that targets political enemies. Taxation knows no names. The only language that taxation understands is a transaction.

Taxpayers are watching how politicians are handling confidential tax matters in public rallies. The taxpayers' response will be commensurate with the way the government treats them.

The Kenya Revenue Authority has, for about five years, engaged in a transformation agenda that targets the utilization of ICT to promote intelligent tax administration.

This modern approach to tax administration relies more on data and machine learning capabilities to drive its processes, including forecasting, targeting, and interfacing of its systems with those of service providers to obtain clean and less controvertible data for intelligent tax administration. This is a huge task.

KRA doing well

KRA has consistently done very well in the last two or so decades. It continues to benchmark against best practice globally, and the results are beautiful.

The organization and its fraternity require support, and not meddling in its work. KRA is a professional organization. Tax targets are scientifically determined using models, which are in line with global best practice.

Globally, a tax/GDP ratio of 20 to 24 percent is considered super. Kenya is right there. Let politicians not discuss KRA's work in political rallies. Unknowingly, politicians are killing the morale of one of the best organizations in the world.

I am aware that the government has arbitrarily enhanced KRA's revenue targets in the belief that the organization was either protecting some people or was simply lethargic.

Let KRA be allowed to advise the government on tax matters. The ladies and gentlemen at Times Tower know a thing or two that may be useful to the overzealous politicians.

Politicians must not vilify the revenue officers. They are professionals. Please, Mr Politician, do not use KRA to fight your political battles. It will be futile. It will be counter-productive.