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THE Sindh Revenue Board has announced an amnesty for persons who have failed to pay sales tax on services since July 1, 2011. According to the new tax policy, only the principal amount of sales tax, along with a 5pc default surcharge, is required to be paid. The penalty has been waived to the extent of 95pc of the default surcharge.
This taxation policy of the Sindh Revenue Board (SRB) appears to be well-directed, and is a timely move in view of its limited enforcement capacity as the board started collecting sales tax on services only a few years back, after the 18th constitutional amendment. By virtue of this amnesty, the board may fill the tax gap created by its enforcement of tax laws.
More importantly, the amnesty is likely to provide relief to businesses, especially small enterprises, operating in the service sector. First, a person providing taxable services is required to be registered under the Sindh Sales Tax on Services Act 2011. Second, a registered person providing taxable services has to maintain records of taxable and exempt services, etc.
Without doubt, these requirements increase the cost of doing business. As the provincial legislation on collection of sales tax on services is not sophisticated enough, the businesses, in particular the smaller ones, might fail to maintain requisite records during the initial phase.
The dispute between the provinces on mode of collection of sales tax on services could be another factor to be discussed in connection with this amnesty scheme. The provinces have different opinions over whether to collect sales tax on services on the basis of origination or destination.
In provincial laws regarding sales tax on services, the chargeability of sales tax on the value of the taxable service — whether it is to be based on the principle of origination or destination — has not been mentioned.
Nevertheless, Sindh argues that services originating from its territorial jurisdiction should be taxed under the Sindh Sales Tax on Services Act 2011, whether they were delivered or consumed in other provinces. On the other hand, Punjab and KP are of the opinion that service should be taxed where it is delivered or consumed.
Such divergent opinions on mode of sales tax collection on services are reported to have led to increased litigations. As a result, a sizeable portion of sales tax revenue from services may not be realised.
Tax amnesty is common in developing countries where a large segment of the economy is undocumented, and where governments try to bring more people on the tax roll every year through such measures. Such amnesties reflect weak enforcement and are designed to bridge the resultant tax gap.
Earlier, the federal government had also introduced a sales tax amnesty scheme, giving the option to defaulters of sales tax to pay 2pc of the outstanding liability. A number of sales tax defaulters benefited from this scheme.
As the provinces have started collecting sales tax on services (with the exception of Balochistan), the federal government has amended the Sales Tax Act 1990 through Statutory Regulatory Order No.212 (I)/2014, dated March 26, 2014. The SRO allows registered persons to adjust input tax paid on services to the provincial governments against the output tax payable on goods to the federal government.
This SRO is retrospectively applicable from July 1, 2013 — something very crucial. Otherwise, sales tax charged on services would have the effect of direct taxation rather than that of a value-added tax without input tax adjustment.
The writer is a graduate in taxation policy and management from Keio University, Japan
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