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VAT Treatment of Food:
Principles and Practice
Sijbren Cnossen
Senior Economic Advisor ITIC, Professor of Economics, University of Pretoria
Emeritus Professor Universities of Rotterdam and Maastricht
Presentation prepared for 12th Annual Asia-Pacific Tax Forum, New Delhi, India, 5-7 May 2015
Considerations
¡  Economic
considerations
¡  Equity concerns
¡  Administrative aspects
Economic considerations
¡  All
consumer goods should be taxed at the
same rate so that relative prices do not change
¡  Exemption or zero-rating distorts
consumption choices and by implication
production choices
¡  Exemption distorts input and outsourcing
policies of exempt entities
¡  Unrelieved VAT on inputs of exempt entities
enters into export prices
Equity concerns
¡ 
¡ 
¡ 
¡ 
Food products are disproportionately consumed by the poor, so
VAT is regressive with respect to income
Taxes should not make the after-tax distribution worse than the
before-tax distribution
Exemption or zero-rating may be the only available way to help
the poor
Nonetheless: exempting or zero-rating foods is ill targeted
instrument to help the poor
Administrative aspects
¡  Exempting
or zero-rating food involves VAT
administration in troublesome definitional,
monitoring and refund activities
¡  High threshold in combination with informal
markets would leave unprocessed food
products anyway out of the base
¡  Administrative resources are better used to
audit large businesses which contribute 90%
of VAT revenue
What do countries do?
¡  New
arrivals on the VAT scene tend to have
only one VAT rate
¡  European and francophone countries
generally apply a lower rate to food products
¡  Countries with Anglo-Saxon taxing traditions
tend to zero rate basic food products
Issues in exempting or zero-rating food
¡  What
should be exempted or zero-rated:
unprocessed food or all food?
¡  Should food served at hotels and restaurants
also enjoy favorable treatment?
¡  If food is exempted or zero-rated how should
the agricultural sector be treated?
Should food be exempted or
zero/lower-rated?
Zero or lower rate
Exemption
Distorts competition
Distorts input choice and outsourcing
policies
Requires registration of many small
businesses and refund of input VAT
No registration and refund of input
VAT, but optional registration still
possible
Requires higher rate on other goods
and services
VAT on inputs of exempted entities is
still collected
Relieves essential foodstuffs
completely of VAT
Effect the same as zero-rate if
agricultural inputs zero-rated
South African experience
¡ 
¡ 
SA zero rates 19 basic foodstuffs
Experience in reducing regressivity is not encouraging:
- VAT is broadly proportional with respect to income
- rich benefit six times as much from zero
rating as the poor
- zero rating meat has little effect
- little change if zero rate abolished
- impact of hypothetical higher-than-standard rate is
negligible
Verdict South African Katz Commission
“ ….providing relief to the poor through
exemptions and VAT zero rating is likely to be
unsound tax policy and ineffective social
policy”
Agriculture: best practice
¡ 
¡ 
Treatment of agricultural sector and fisheries:
generally exempt but problem with unrelieved
VAT on inputs
Types of concession
¡  Invoicing
of presumptive tax credit by farmers
¡  Presumptive tax credit for purchaser
¡  Refund of average tax on inputs
¡  Elimination of VAT on inputs (but not if inputs have
various end-uses)
¶ Preferred solution depends on importance of exports, role of
cooperatives, importance of purchased inputs, hobby farmers
VAT treatment of food products
Categories of foods
§ 
§ 
§ 
§ 
§ 
§ 
Ø 
Ø 
Food and ingredients for home cooking
Take-out meals and food supplied by restaurants
Snack foods for consumption at home
Alcoholic beverages
Soft drinks
Food consumed in restaurants
Last four items generally taxable at standard rate
Taxation of take-out meals controversial: compete with food
sold in grocery stores, taxation seems unfair if grocery store
sales not taxable, definition of take-out meals can be
complex (ice creams, fresh popcorn)
Treatment of restaurant and
catering services
¡ 
Categories of supplies
Food supplied for consumption in a restaurant
-  Prepared food catered to a customer's place
-  Custom preparation of food from ingredients
supplied by customer
First two items taxable on full charge, including cost of
ingredients
Last item is supply of food preparation services only. The
ingredients could be purchased by customer free of tax, if food
zero-rated
- 
Ø 
Ø 
Best approach to taxing food
Tax all food for human or animal consumption,
consumed on or off premise, at –
¡  standard rate
¡  standard rate, but exempt limited number of
unprocessed essential foodstuffs
¡  apply lower rate to all food products, except
alcoholic beverages
NB. Do not zero rate foodstuffs
Should food be taxed under VAT?
A personal view
Ø 
Ø 
Ø 
Ø 
Ø 
Answer is resounding “yes”! At standard rate
Exemption or zero-rating is distortionary and mainly
benefits higher-income groups
Extra revenue can be used to lower standard rate or to
finance education and health care for the poor
Zero-rating poor involves difficult to administer
refunds to small businesses; exemption entails
troublesome definitional issues
If staple foods are subsidized than taxation and
increase in subsidy achieves same result as zero-rating
Conclusion
Thank you for your attention and
enjoy your coffee break!