The
Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) has been pondering over
the issue of Value Added Tax (VAT) for long. Finally,
studies into its implementation have reached the
advanced stage and UAE may very soon impose VAT
replacing the older customs duties.
Customs
duty will be terminated as part of the free trade pact that
the GCC will sign with trading partners like the EU, China and
India.
It took nearly two years for the country to decide that the
proposed VAT would be the best practice for both UAE and GCC.
Abdul Rahman Al Saleh, Dubai Customs Executive Director, told
a seminar at the Arabian Travel Market that VAT will be
introduced across the country after the approval of the
Federal Government and once its infrastructure for
implementation is ready by the last quarter of 2008 or early
2009.
Although, the amount of revenue generated by the customs duty
was not revealed, it is believed that the tax rate will be
somewhere between three and five percent and will generate
about the same as collected in customs.
Officials were also confident that even though the
introduction of VAT may heighten the existing inflation, its
impact will be limited for the first year and from then on it
will become a part of the system.
The initiative to be taken by UAE is being supported by the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the country has plans to
spend the money raised from VAT, for social causes like health
and education. The most elating part about introducing VAT is
that since taxes are set at the lowest, burden on the masses
will be minimal.
The only difficulty faced by the Government at present is of
determining exactly how to bring the various kinds of services
under the purview of VAT.
So
urce
: Fibre2fashion.com - Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India, dated
08/05/2008