The Economist - UK (2022-04-09)

(Antfer) #1

44 Middle East & Africa TheEconomistApril9th 2022


sonshad raided thecity’s central bank,
stealing$300minlocalandforeigncur­
rency.“HissonsareworsethanQaddafi’s,”
saysa Benghazibusinessmaninexile.
Journalists inthecity are monitored
andmuzzled.MrHaftar’scriticsareliable
todisappear.TheWallStreetJournalreport­
edin 2020 thathehoardsa stashofgold,
originally from Venezuela. Since he re­
openedBenghazi’sportin2018,ithasbe­
come anentrepot for captagon, anam­
phetaminemanufacturedinSyria.“Drugs
isBenghazi’smaingrowthbusiness,”says
a localacademic.Dealersaresaidtolaun­
dermoneyinfancyclothesshopsandres­
taurantsalongVeniceStreet.Jewellersca­
teringtogangstersarethriving.
Benghazi’speoplehadhopedthatAbdul

HamidDbeibeh,Libya’sbeleagueredprime
ministerbasedinTripoli,wouldsetabout
rebuildingBenghazi.LastMayheunveiled
a reconstructionpackagethatincludedthe
city.HewaslikenedbyoptimiststoRafiq
al­Hariri,theLebanesetycoonwhoused
hisowncompanytorebuildBeirutafterits
civilwar(beforehewasassassinated).Va­
rious unfinished projects, such as an
Olympic stadium that Mr Dbeibeh had
overseenunderQaddafi,mightpossiblybe
completed.ButMrHaftar’sgunmenbarred
MrDbeibehfromvisitingtheirstronghold,
andthefundsnevermaterialised.A gener­
alelectionscheduledforDecemberraised
hopes ofbreaking thedeadlockbut has
beenrepeatedlyputoff.MeanwhileBen­
ghazimouldersaway. n

TaxesintheArabworld

Collecting from the wrongpeople


L


ifeinegyptgetsmoreexpensivebythe
month.  Sitting  in  a  café  on  a  shady
street,  Mahmoud,  a  software  developer,
runs through the new taxes and fees. A val­
ue­added  tax  (vat)  was  introduced  at  13%
in 2016, then hiked to 14%. A few years ago
the government added a tax of ten Egyptian
pounds  ($0.55)  to  Mahmoud’s  monthly
phone bill. His cigarettes go up a pound or
two whenever the treasury needs a puff of
extra  cash.  Last  time  he  got  a  new  driving
licence, it cost 15 times more than before.
The  one  tax  that  has  not  soared  is  the
one  on  his  most  valuable  investment,  a
rental property he bought in 2016. He says
it has appreciated by $100,000 or so, a 25%
increase.  But  his  annual  property­tax  bill
has remained almost flat, at less than 1% of
the apartment’s value.
Arab countries have long lagged in col­
lecting  taxes.  In  2015  the  imf estimated
they raised the equivalent of 13% of non­oil
gdp, compared with 17% in other emerging
markets. Christine Lagarde, then the fund’s
director, told an audience in Abu Dhabi in
2016  that  Arab  states  should  “re­engineer
their tax systems” and boost revenue.
They  got  the  message—up  to  a  point.
Since  2016  five  Arab  countries  have
brought  in  vat.  Governments  have  im­
posed a spate of other levies on everything
from mobile phones to cinema tickets and
sought non­tax revenue by raising fees. 
If they are getting better at taxing their
citizens, though, they are often taxing the
wrong  ones,  imposing  a  big  burden  on
those who can least afford it. Consumption
(or indirect) taxes, such as vat, are highly

efficientbutgenerallyregressive.Theytax
whatyouspend;thepoorspendmoreof
theirincomethantherich.Intheoecd, a
clubofmostlyrichcountries,indirecttax­
esraiseaboutone­thirdoftaxrevenue.In
recentdecadestheproportionhasfallen.
Arabstatesaregoingtheoppositeway
(seechart).Egyptcollected46%oftaxrev­
enuefromgoodsandservicesinthefiscal
year2020­21,upfrom40%sixyearsbefore.
Indirecttaxesaremorethanhalfthetake
inTunisia,andthree­quartersofitinJor­
dan,wheretheyaddupto12­13%ofgdp.
Theappealissimple.Value­addedtaxes
raisea lotofcashwithoutdistortingecon­
omiesmuch(whichiswhyEuropeanwel­
fare states love them). And outside the
Gulf, most Arab countries have only a
patchypicture ofwhattheir citizensdo
andhowmuchtheyearn,whichmakesit
hardtolevydirecttaxes.Sometwo­thirds

ofEgyptiansworkoffthebooksininfor­
maljobs.LessthanhalfofTunisianshave
bankaccounts.ThelasttimeLebanoncon­
ducteda censuswasinthe1930s.Taxin­
spectorsareoftenoverworkedandreliant
onpenandpaperratherthandatabases.
Evasioniswidespread.Areportin 2018 by
BankAudi,aLebaneselender,estimated
thatitcosttheexchequer$5bna year(10%
ofgdpatthetime).
Authoritiesoftenblamethis,wrongly,
ontheinformalsector.MostEgyptiansla­
bouringintheblackmarketshouldpayno
incometaxora topmarginalrateofjust
2.5%.Evenifthetaxmanfoundthemall,
theextrarevenuewouldbemeagre.The
biggerproblemisa taxsystemskewedto­
wardstherich.Egypt’scorporate­taxrateof
22.5%isfivepointsbelowtheAfricanaver­
age,while itstopincome­taxbracket of
25%ranksasoneofthecontinent’slowest.
Italsohasnoinheritancetax.
Manyrichandmiddle­classArabspref­
erbuyingpropertytoshares,seeingitas
saferandmorelucrative.Yetgovernments
collectlittlepropertytax.Jordan’sfinance
ministryestimatesthatitbroughtinjust
115m dinars ($162m) from property last
year,just1%oftaxrevenue.
Somecountriesassesspropertytaxon
rentalratesratherthanthevalueofthe
building,whichleadstopunybills.Egypt
calculatestheseonlyonceeveryfiveyears,
withincreasescappedat30%perassess­
ment, even though property values in
somepartsofCairorisebyasmuchas25%
a year.RichEgyptianswhoplaythestock­
marketaresubjecttoa 10%capital­gains
tax.Butiftheyinvestthatmoneyinprop­
erty,thetaxratecandropbelow1%.
Oil­exportingGulfstatesdonotlevyin­
cometax,fearingitwouldupsetcitizens
andmaketheircountrieslessattractiveto
migrants. Corporate­tax rates are low,
rangingfromzeroto15%.Insteadthey,too,
leanonconsumptiontaxes.SaudiArabia
introduceda 5%vatin2018,thentripledit
in 2020 (amovetheimfadvisedagainst).It
willaccountfor79%oftaxrevenuethis
year.PoorerSaudiswillbehithardest.Rich
onestendtodotheirbig­ticketspending
outsidethekingdom.
Instead of making taxsystems more
progressive,Arabstatesareseekingever
moredesperatewaystoraiserevenue.Last
yeara parliamentarycommitteeinEgypt
approveda 3%taxonpurchasesinduty­
freestores(whichmayneeda newname).
Tunisianowchargespeople 100 millimes
(3cents)forpaperreceiptsinshops.Thisis
thefiscalequivalentoflookingunderthe
sofacushionsforsparechange.
Suchmeasureswillnotmakemuchofa
dentindeficits,butmayangercitizens.In
2019 theLebanesegovernmenttriedtoput
a 20­cents­a­daytaxonWhatsAppcalls.It
becamea trigger formass proteststhat
broughtthegovernmentdown.n

CAIRO
Arab states are raising tax revenue, but toomuchofitisfromthepoor

The taxman cometh, for some
Share of total taxation, %
2022* or latest available

Source:Governmentstatistics *Fiscal year

Egypt

Morocco

Tunisia

Jordan

SaudiArabia

100806040200
Other

Direct

Indirect taxes
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