| Gulf
VAT plans face setback
Disagreement
between GCC member states over monetary union could
delay plans for the introduction of value added tax in
the region, according to an IMF official.
Mohsin S Khan, IMF director for the Middle East and
central Asia told Gulf News yesterday “Any delay in
achieving the GCC currency union will have an impact on
the introduction of VAT across the region.
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Huge
fiscal surpluses generated by economic boom also meant the
“introduction of tax will be a politically sensitive
subject” he told the newspaper.
The
six GCC member states said last week they would delay the
decision on when to aim for monetary until next year, and
not at a summit in Qatar in December.
All six states have said the 2010 deadline would be
difficult to meet. UAE Central Bank Governor Sultan Nasser
Al Suweidi told .Commerce magazine in October the deadline
was likely to be delayed by more than five years.
However GCC secretary general Abdul Rhaman Al Attiyah told
a news conference last Wednesday there would be no delay
in meeting the target of 2010.
The IMF said last month it backed UAE plans for the
introduction of VAT. A report entitled Article IV
Consultation with the UAE, said the IMF "welcomed the
preparations to introduce a Value Added Tax system at the
federal level."
Khan said in May VAT made "economic sense" for
Gulf countries that are diversifying into sectors
including tourism, hospitality and financial services.
"Taxation is certainly a politically sensitive
subject in the Gulf. However, a sales tax is unlikely to
attract as much opposition as an income tax," he said
at the time.
Source
:
ArabianBusiness.com
- Dubai,Umm al Qaiwain,United Arab Emirates, dated
05/11/2007
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