Title: THE VAT EXPERIENCE
1THE VAT EXPERIENCE
- INTERNATIONAL TAX DIALOGUE
- VAT CONFERENCE
- 15-16 MARCH 2005, ROME
- Michael Keen
- Head, Tax Policy Division
- Fiscal Affairs Department
- International Monetary Fund
2- Nature and Spread of VAT
-
- Titles vary, and significant variation across
countries, but the essence is - A VAT is a broad-based tax on sales, with
systematic crediting of tax paid on inputs
3- Economic appeal is
- Unlike turnover tax, there is no
cascadingimplying no distortion of methods or
forms of production...........and no distortion
of trade, in particular, if levied on the
destination basis - This is the key theoretical merit
(Diamond-Mirrlees theorem!) - Unlike retail sales tax, not all revenue is lost
if final sale escapes tax
4-
- Spread has been staggering
- In 1965, only two countries had a VAT
- Now, about 135 do....
- ....with take-up in transition and developing
countries in last 15-20 years especially striking
- Main areas without a VAT are now
- Middle East (but changing?)
- US and (for a few more days) India (reflecting
federalism?) - Small islands (but how big a potential gain?)
5- Has VAT Lived Up To Its Promises?
- (An aside VAT has been shamefully
under-researched!) - Are there any signs that the VAT has delivered
the efficiency gains that are the main claim of
its advocates? - One way to answer this is....
- ....If it is a more efficient tax then, under
weak assumptions, we would expect countries with
a VAT to raise more revenueall else equalthan
those without
6- Work continues, but signs are that the gains are
greater in countries - With higher GDP per capita
- That are less open to trade
- And a market test How many countries have ever
removed a VAT once adopted? - .....5 (and three of them reintroduced it!)
7Three Key Design Issues Rate(s), Exemptions,
Thresholds
- Rate(s)
-
- Collection costsadministration and
compliancepoint to a single rate - other than for exports, which are zero-rated
(though this is not strictly required for the
destination principle) - BUT
-
8- Policy admits differentiation
- To deal with commodities in inelastic demand....
- ....though excises deal with most of those
- For equity reasons...
- ....if there is really no better-targeted tax
or spending instrument
9- Tension between these concerns is especially
stark in developing countries, since
administration is weak and other instruments
limited - But tax specialists tend to prefer a single
rate... - ....and indeed over 70 percent of all VATs
introduced since 1995 have had just one positive
rate
10Exemptions
- .....(meaning that no tax is charged on sales,
butunlike zero-ratingtax on inputs is not
recovered).... -
- Are inconsistent with the basic logic of the
VAT. - They.....
11- Introduce cascading and distort production
- Create a bias towards self-supply
- Reduce revenue (or maybe increase it)
- Are not simple to administer
- Favor imports over domestic production
- Tend to creep (as exempt sectors want their
suppliers to be exempt too)
12-
- Scaling back exemptions is likely to be a major
focus of reform in the years ahead... - ....and we are learning more about how to do
this, e.g. in relation to the public sector and
financial activities
13Thresholds
- Practice varies hugely...
- ....(from zero to 600,000)...
- for reasons that are less than fully understood
-
- Standard advice has been for a high threshold,
but many countries continue to be unconvinced
14- Basic case for a high threshold is that nature
is kind, giving us a strong concentration of the
potential VAT base in a relatively small number
of taxpayers.... - largest 15 percent of taxpayers may account for
85 percent of revenue - ......and recent analytical work, taking account
of economic distortions associated with a
threshold, tend to support standard advice
15- This debateand the focus on large taxpayers
more generallyis increasingly focusing attention
on the taxation of small and medium sized
enterprises, often on fringes of formal
sector.........so as to - Protect the VAT
- Widen the tax base
- Provide coherent and simple interface with other
taxes too (including income tax and social
contributions)
16VAT Modernizing Tax Administration
- In some respects, the VAT is (or should be) an
easy tax - More fundamentally, however, in many transition
and developing countries it is a catalyst for
modernization.... - ....shifting tax administration from a system
based on direct and often face-to-face assessment
to one based on....
17-
-
- Voluntary compliance based on self-assessment
(meaning that taxpayers calculate and pay tax due
with minimal intervention by authorities, but
subject to audit and penalty)
18-
- This means profound (and continuing) challenges
in (especially) - Organization of the tax administration (moving
away from tax-based to functional or taxpayer
segment structures) - Development of audit capacity and programs
- Taxpayer services and education
19- And key challenges arise from distinctive feature
that a VAT invoice is a check written on the
government (Bird).... - ....which reaches its most pronounced form in
the difficulty all VAT administrations have in
dealing with refunds the Achilles heel of the
VAT - Very much work in progress, but the prize is
glittering..... - ....and includes the prospect of an effective
personal income tax
20Concluding Weve Only Just Begun....
- The VAT is still young ahead lie many
challenges - Meeting likelihood of increased revenue to offset
effects of further trade liberalization and
intensified international tax competition - Exploiting full potential of VAT, which we are
still learning about (e.g. in relation to federal
systems)
21- Dealing with mobile or location-less consumption
- Increasing need for international coordination
- Reaching into hard-to-tax sectors
22RECENT POLICY ADMINISTRATION DEVELOPMENTS IN
VAT/GST
- INTERNATIONAL TAX DIALOGUE
- VAT CONFERENCE
- 15-16 MARCH 2005, ROME
- Jeffrey Owens
- Director
- OECD Centre for Tax Policy and Administration
23VAT Across OECD Countries
- VAT in 29 of 30 OECD countries
- USA is the only exception
- Significant source of revenue across OECD
countries and growing - - VAT ( of all tax) 18.7 (2002)
- 15.3
(1985) - -VAT ( of GDP) 6.8 (2002)
- 5.1
(1985)
24(No Transcript)
25Rates And Structure
- Standard rates vary widely- from 5-25, averaging
almost 18 - Standard rates relatively stable over last 5
years - Most OECD countries have multiple rate structures
(i.e. standard, reduced, and zero) - Some have specific rates for specific regions
26Rates And Structure
- Complex rate structures clearly complicate
administration and taxpayers compliance - Historical and political factors?
- VAT replaced more specific sales taxes
- View in some countries that VAT is a tax on
luxuries - Very few have a wide base for the standard rate
New Zealand Denmark Slovak Republic
27Rates And Structure
- Thresholds for VAT exemption registration
- - Vary widely across OECD countries
- - Broad mix of zero, medium, high thresholds
- Small traders wide use of simplified liability
calculation schemes and infrequent payment and
return filing regimes to ease compliance burden
28Exemptions
- Continue to distort
- Especially financial services (outsourcing)
- Recent New Zealand changes to introduce partial
zero-rating (for B2B) - Australias rules on recovery of input tax
- EU updating rules on financial services
29Valuation Issues
- Cross-border supplies between related parties
- Goods Arms length principle applied by Customs
- Services Normally on amount paid, and
accounted for under reverse charge - Opportunities for avoidance by exempt sector?
- Cross-checks to transfer pricing valuations?
30Policy Developments
- Use of Electronic Commerce
- OECDs 1998 Ottawa Taxation Framework Conditions
- Tax in place of consumption
- Goods less of a problem
- Business-to-Business less of a problem
- Reverse charge
- Business-to-Consumer
- Difficult to collect (EU Directive)
- Relatively little revenue
31Policy Developments
- International Services and Intangibles
- Growth in sector
32Chart I SHARE OF MARKET SERVICES IN TOTAL
VALUE ADDED (1980 AND 2001) Source OECD
(STI Scoreboard 2003)
33Policy Developments
- International Services and Intangibles
- OECD 2004 Report
- Double taxation/double non-taxation
- Lack of refunds
- Uncertainties for business and governments
- Principles developed -2005
- Tax in jurisdiction of consumption
- VAT should not have an economic impact on
business (except where deliberately designed)
34Administration Developments
- Good administration key to successful VAT
- Self-assessment by taxpayers, supported by
effective education and service and backed up by
timely enforcement (incl. verification) is the
fundamental administration approach - Effective compliance risk management processes
are central to the effective targeting of
compliance risks and best use of resources
35Administration Developments
- Issues of taxpayers non-compliance
- Many countries report wide-ranging compliance
issues (e.g. fraudulent schemes, sales
suppression, excess input credit claims
non-payment) -
- Limited data on overall revenue losses but some
EU countries showing up to 17 VAT losses - Carousel fraud is/has been a major problem in EU
- Refund controls remain a major problem in many
countries, given numbers interest obligations
36Administration Developments
- Responses to taxpayers non-compliance have
included. - Strengthened risk assessment at agency level
- Joint and several liability in supply chain
- New reporting penalties, and assessment powers
- Tightened business registration checks
- Intensification of refund validation checks
- Targeting specialist resources at criminal abuses
- Better and more audits
- Increased exchanges of information across borders
37Administration Developments
- UK strategic risk management approach is
significant/ of major interest - Measure tax gap top-down bottom-up estimates
- Identify losses amounts and causes
- Develop comprehensive strategies to combat
- Set targets and publicise strategies and outcomes
38Administration Developments
- Automation growing use of electronic services
for information provision, return filing
payment - Integration
- Early indications of moves towards integrated
reporting of all business tax liabilities - Whole of taxpayer tax accounts for all
liabilities and credits for all taxes growing in
use
39Conclusions
- VAT is likely to remain a significant revenue
source - International issues will continue to grow,
especially as businesses re-structure and
outsource, and taxpayers globalize their
activities - Competitive pressures
- Cross-border shopping
- Constraints on rate freedoms
40Conclusions
- Sustained and well-targeted efforts are required
to reduce non-compliance and avoid undermining of
VAT as a reliable method of taxation - International community needs to address this
issue - Maybe new instruments are required???
41VAT IN DEVELOPING AND TRANSITIONAL ECONOMIES
(DTEs)
- INTERNATIONAL TAX DIALOGUE
- VAT CONFERENCE
- 15-16 MARCH 2005, ROME
- Professor Richard Bird
- University of Toronto
- Consultant to World Bank
42VAT Worksbut.......
- Some problems remain on the policy side
- Some are old
- Financial sector
- Public sector
- and
- Some are new
- Digital commerce
- Sub-national VATs
43VAT Works..but.
- Problems also remain in administration
- Again both old problems
- How best to organize VAT administration
- And
- New problems
- Information exchange especially cross-border
44Unfortunately Life is Harder in
DTEs
- The problems are bigger
- More small businesses
- Larger shadow economy
- Equity aspects are relatively more important
- But the resources available to deal with them are
scarcer
45What Can Be Done?
- There is surprisingly much that we do not know as
well as we should with respect to both VAT policy
and VAT administration in developing and
transitional countries - So there is an important research agenda both for
tax policy and tax administration - Still, experience does offer some first thoughts
on how to proceed -
46The NOSFA Principle
- One main lesson we have learned is that, while
some policy and administrative decisions are
clearly preferable in principle, when it comes to
practice No One Size Fits All (NOSFA) - That is, the best policy and administrative
design for each country has to be determined
carefully in light of the conditions and
objectives of that country
47Universal Problems, Local Solutions
- Another way to say much the same thing is that
while every VAT in every country has many common
features, the details of how those features are
designed and implemented often differs, and
arguably should differ, from country to country - Since the devil is in the details it is thus
critically important to pay close attention to
these details in each country
48Growing Into VAT?
- Can, or should, a country implement a full VAT
immediately or should it, so to speak, grow
into one over time? - While there is a good general argument for the
latter approach, it is also potentially dangerous
since countries may get stuck for a very long
time with a (theoretically) bad VAT - Question if the choice is really a bad VAT
adequately administered or a good VAT poorly
administered, which is better? Or is this a
false choice?
49Some Further Questions (1)
- Taxation is inevitably about equity issues to a
considerable extent. When it comes to VAT in
DTE, it seems that - All agree that luxury rates serve little
purpose - And that zero-rating (other than for exports) is
not advisable - But then which is better and in what
circumstances for equity goods exemption or
reduced rates?
50Some Further Questions (2)
- Small firms are a big problem in DTEs
- Thresholds seem to be set too low in many
countries why? - More thought needs to be given to linking
simplified systems for small with regular VAT - When, if even, does VAT withholding make sense
for coping with the small sector?
51Some Further Questions(3)
- Visible small firms are hard enough to deal with
invisible firms of all sizes are worse - Role and effects of VAT on shadow sector need
much more thought