Policy Brief 13

In this policy brief, we examine the approach adopted by the Government of Tanzania to taxing electronic payments, including mobile money. We start with an overview of the current framework of taxation for electronic payments and its history, and then review how the market for electronic payment services has developed since 2013, when excise duty was first applied to them. We analyse the current tax burden on electronic payments and consider how the design of the taxes that have been imposed on them measures up against a number of criteria, including the fundamental principles of taxation and alignment with the government’s digitalisation ambitions. We offer a number of possible directions for reform, based on our conclusions, and set out the data and analysis that will be needed to evaluate them fully. We conclude with suggestions for action.

Authors

Christopher Wales

Christopher Wales is an ICTD consultant working as an Associate Research Fellow with the DIGITAX programme. He has worked with Prime Ministers and Finance Ministers in many countries on economic and fiscal policy, fiscal institutions, revenue administration, labour market issues and pension policy. Chris is currently Chairperson of the Board of Directors of the Rwanda Social Security Board, member of the Council of the Institute for Fiscal Studies, and member of the Advisory Board of the Oxford University Centre for Business Taxation, which he was instrumental in founding.

Hannelore Niesten

Hannelore Niesten is an ICTD consultant working as a Research Officer for the DIGITAX programme. Hannelore holds a PhD in Law from Maastricht University and Hasselt University (double degree), an LLM in Business and Finance law from George Washington University, Advanced Masters in Tax Law and Notary Law from the Catholic University of Louvain, and Masters in Globalization and Law, and European Law from Maastricht University.
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