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Taxation , Trade and investment linkages •My presentation will be prefaced by 3 points: •Understanding and appreciating the linkages between trade, investment and finance will yield important insights that can generate synergies. Global development debate on “coherence” among financial, trading and monetary policies. ( Monterrey Consensus) It is very difficult to ensure that trade becomes an engine of development without the aiding support of policies in the investment and fiscal area. Cont. • Fiscal policy has tended to be seen as a mechanism to generate revenue Fiscal policy as a tool to leverage better outcomes from investment and trade reforms/policies • Contextualise the linkages within the overall development agenda, national / regional policy goals based on national/ regional priorities. Taxation, trade and investment become tools to achieve these goals. Taxation & Trade • The broad objectives (especially in developing countries) of trade policy are mainly two: • To nurture and protect the economy by reducing pre-mature exposure of the economy in general or particular sector from external competitive pressures and shocks. • To enhance response capabilities of the economy and the population to domestic and external opportunities. Cont. • Both objectives are aimed at fostering sustainable development in the long run and reducing poverty levels in the short term. • Taxation can be used as a strategic tool to achieve these trade policy objectives. Taxation tools • Should be aware of the wide range of tax tools, how to use them; advocate & protect them especially in the ongoing trade related negotiation, loan /debt discourses • Choice depend on policy goals to be achieved Import Tariffs • import tariffs are customs duties imposed on a product at the time of import. • Imported products less competitive compared to the similar domestic product since the cost of duty charged usually get passed on to the consumer as increase in prices. • Protect the domestic economy or sector. • Many countries, especially the developed countries, have kept their tariffs on agricultural products very high. • used other related policy tools like tariff escalation and tariff peaks to further protect their agricultural sector Cont. • tariff escalation a higher tariff is imposed on higher processed product compared to the lower processed ones. For example low duties are imposed on fresh tomatoes, but higher duties on canned tomatoes and even higher duties on tomato ketchup. • In Africa, have very low tariffs ; unilaterally reduced their tariffs under the IMF/WB Structural Adjustment Programmes (SAPs). WTO, Bilateral trade agreements ( EPAs); • EU –EAC EPAs liberalisation 82% of trade between them • Lower import taxes , flooding of cheap and competitively produced goods into Africa – high Subsidies in Europe. Export taxes • Restrict exports in order to achieve a number of policy objectives: – To promote value addition of that particular product. – To guarantee an adequate supply of a particular commodity at affordable prices at the domestic market, in order to maintain economic and political stability – To reduce commodity price fluctuation. – To help increase fiscal revenue Criticism Vs Export Taxes • They are a non tariff barrier and that they distort trade ; create an unfair advantage to domestic industries involved in international trade because it restricts the availability of raw materials for processing. • hurts the exporters as it makes the exports expensive in the markets where they are exported. • Under attack in many regional and bilateral trade agreements including the EPAs, though they are allowable in the WTO. Cont. • Using export taxes is a right and legitimate tool; and many countries are imposing export taxes to achieve one or more of the above objectives. • Elimination of export taxes , extensive reduction of import tariffs –negative impact on revenue – fiscal constraints – limited provision of social services & no capital for reinvestment in the economy - FDI , Loans ( conditionalities) Cont. • How EU has used ban on export taxes in the EPAs : Raw Materials Initiative: ‘Access to primary and secondary raw materials should become a priority in EU trade and regulatory policy. The EU should promote new rules and agreements on sustainable access to raw materials where necessary, and ensure compliance with international commitments at multilateral and at bilateral level, including WTO accession negotiations, Free Trade Agreements, regulatory dialogue and non-preferential agreements’ Taxation & investment • Objective of taxation tools would be to ensure that the investment effectively delivers on its promises i.e. transfers technology, employment creation, industrialisation & fostering backward and forward linkages, capital accumulation....... Tax Incentives • For influencing the structure and nature of investment that generates positive spill over –rather than attract it. • Malaysia- certain foreign companies could claim income tax deductions on expenditure incurred for the training of employees, product development • In Korea, a program made expenditures on human resource development in SMEs eligible for a tax credit of up to 10 per cent. Such incentives have been implemented also in Singapore, Thailand and Hungary. Obstacles to using tax tools • Trade , finance and investment liberalisation (EPAs, GATs, BITs) • – restrictions on tax policy space ; transfers/reinvestments, joint ventures, capital account liberalisation, floating foreign exchange rates... • Negotiating capacity of host governments ; race to the bottom • Tax /trade/investment & Development : A tale of 2 contradictory paradigms – Delink between where we want to go/to achieve – the policies to take us there Conclusion