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Malawi seeks fair returns from mining investments

Written By Tenson Zobo

As the local economy continues to sail through troubled waters, Country Director for ActionAid Malawi Martha Khonje says Malawians must forget the possibilities of bilateral donors bringing back their aid purses to Malawi, regardless of the fiscal management improvements put in place.

 

Khonje was speaking in Lilongwe on Wednesday during the launch of report titled: Mistreated- The tax treaties that are depriving the world’s poorest countries of vital revenues, aimed at providing the much needed evidence-based information that will enable government to take the necessary steps to reduce or eliminate tax avoidance by multinational companies operating in Malawi.

 

“Malawi is in a funding crisis following the withdrawal of direct budget support, and the governments need more money to provide quality public services such as health and education. However, negative impacts of a broken global and national tax system continues to perpetuating inequality and poverty, particularly to women and girls” said Khonje

She further said the most paramount source of this funding is fairly taxing corporation so as to raise more revenue. The problem of corporate tax avoidance has been high on the political agenda in Malawi, at the African Union and at global level and it is the major challenge for developing and least developed countries, which rely more heavily on tax revenues.

Therefore, she recommended that to address the matter changes are required such as updating the global and national tax rules which allow companies to get away with paying little or no tax.

Minister of Finance Goodall Gondwe in his budget speech, of the 2015/2016 fiscal year agrees that it is was unlikely that the country’s bilateral donors will ever resume budgetary assistance following revelations of massive looting of public funds by greedy civil servants and businesses in what is known as the cashgate.

However, in same budget speech, he reiterated that it is crucial for Malawi to start restricting its fiscal framework without expecting the budgetary support that the country has been accustomed to receiving from development partners since its independence.

Governance Officer for ActionAid Chisomo Manthalu during presentation of the study revealed that the IMF estimates shows that developing countries currently lose US$ 200 billion every year to tax avoidance.

“I would like to emphasize this very strongly. Tax treaties between countries play a facilitating role in many of tax avoidance schemes used by multinational corporations to reduce their tax liability”, he said.

He also highlight that, for instance, in 2015 a study on how Malawi lost US$ 43 million in revenue over a six years , from a single company- the Australian mining Paladin company through a combination of harmful tax incentives from the Malawi government, not only that, but also tax planning using tax treaty shopping.

Government need to urgently consider the treaties which restrict the taxing rights of Malawi and multinationals pay their fair share of tax, and subject the treaties to far greater public scrutiny. Thus, it is so as to reform and curb base erosion and profit shifting and improving corporate transparency and also Taxation Act should be reviewed to improve their effectiveness and align them to best regional and international practices.

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