*Tax Transparency: We Should Have a Good Debate*

Siromani Dhungana*

IMF working paper on 'VAT Fraud and Evasion: What Do We Know and What Can
be Done?' says: Like any tax, the VAT is vulnerable to evasion and fraud.
But its credit and refund mechanism does offer unique opportunities for
abuse… After introduction of Value Added Tax (VAT) revenue in 1997, Nepal's
tax administration has been facing many challenges to effectively implement
it. Multi-million VAT fraud scam was one of the serious threats faced by
Nepal's tax administration. The scam has once again come to limelight after
Nepal's tax administration -- Inland Revenue Department -- has moved to the
Supreme Court challenging the decision taken by National Information
Commission which had directed the government to reveal the detail of VAT
fraud.

*VAT Fraud in Nepal*
In fact, 518 firms were not taxpayer but fraudsters. They had not tried to
evade or avoid their tax compliance. The case was more complicated in
nature since the fraud, according to officials involved in investigation,
could ruin the entire economic system of the country if tax administration
had failed to identify the problem on time.
These firms had made false claims for credit and refund by presenting
forged invoices for non-existent or exaggerated purchases and succeeded to
take rebate from state coffer to the transactions which were never happened
in reality.
Inland Revenue Department – had completed the investigation of 518 firms
involved in Value Added Tax (VAT) scam that had tarnished the image of the
private sector in April 2012. The department had assessed a total of NRs
6.59 billion revenue — NRs 3.06 billion VAT, NRs 3.32 billion income tax
and NRs 205.27 million excise — from the investigation.
Concluding the investigation director general at IRD Tanka Mani Sharma had
said: "the trend of under-invoicing, attempt to avoid VAT and producing
fake VAT invoices by creating fictitious transactions have been found
during investigations." He had also said that traders, contractors and
firms across the country were involved in robbing national coffers by
producing fake VAT bills.

*Debate: Revenue a Public Information or Not*
>From the very beginning, there was tussle between civil society members and
tax administration regarding information of VAT fraud. On the one hand,
civil society members advocated for the reveal of entire information
claiming that getting tax information is peoples' right to know. However,
tax administration constantly denied the name of firms and businessmen to
reveal citing Nepal's Income Tax Act.
Later the dispute reached to the National Information Commission (NIC)
which directed Finance Ministry to provide the detail information of VAT
fraud in July, 2011.
Giving its final verdict in October 2011 to the complaint lodged by Freedom
Forum, National Information Commission has directed the Finance Ministry to
reveal the names of VAT evaders. Concluding that the people have the right
to know about their tax amount, the commission directed the government to
reveal the name of firms involved in VAT fraud.

*A New Twist*
Quite paradoxical that Nepal's tax administration is trying to protect them
under Income Tax Act and Value Added Tax (VAT) Act. Civil society members
claim that this is a direct protection of VAT defaulters by Nepal's tax
administration.
Nearly two years after the decision of NIC, Nepal's tax administration
approached the Supreme Court on February 20 asking it to annul the decision
taken by NIC regarding public disclosure of VAT scam.
Tax can never be an issue of public interest in Nepal and businessmen and
officials at tax administration, from their attitude, are trying to prove
that tax is collected due to their effort, opines Kathmandu-based revenue
analyst Anirudra Neupane.
The question whether tax issue should be public or not has been raised
after the move of the tax administration. Chairperson at Freedom Forum Tara
Nath Dahal says: "It was not simply a scam of tax evasion or tax avoidance.
Some big and reputed companies, traders and business firms had involved in
Value Added Tax (VAT) fraud producing counterfeit invoice. They produced
fake invoice and claim refund to the transaction which were never happened
in reality."
General public are real taxpayers and they have right to know the status of
their tax money, adds Dahal. But, tax administration in Nepal is trying to
establish the notion that tax is not an issue of public disclosure by
challenging the decision by NIC.
In spite of criticism from different quarters to prosecute criminal charge
against businessmen and firms involved in the biggest robbery of state
coffer, Nepal's tax administration has been constantly protecting VAT
defaulter invoking Income Tax Act which is not natural, says Dahal.

*Gravity of the Issue*
“Using fake VAT bill is a serious crime that equals to using fake currency
notes,” former Finance Minister Bharat Mohan Adhikari had said during
interrogation by then parliamentary Public Accounts Committee in March 2011.
The government should respect taxpayers but not fraudsters, according to
Krishna Sapkota who has been closely observing VAT scam. The move of Inland
Revenue Department has raised the question of role of Nepal's tax
administration.
In principle, the government should spend tax money in transparent manner
but the latest move of IRD will be a stumbling block to civil society's
campaign of making tax issues transparent, says Sapkota.
Even poorest of poor people contribute taxes to government's treasury, adds
Sapkota. How the tax administration can protect the persons involved in
cases which, according to responsible minister, is equal to produce fake
currency.
If revoked from the Supreme Court, it will be serious setback to Nepal's
Right to Information movement, according to him.

*Solution: Reform in System*
Transparency and accountability should be at the core within the tax system
in democratic country. The government should respect and protect taxpayers
but not fraudsters. For that, national tax law and policy should be
transparent. Public disclosure of tax will help reduce tax related fraud
and maintain transparency in tax regime. Greater tax disclosure will create
a fair and sensible approach in tax system. Transparency in tax should be
in center of debate in Nepal's tax policy and governance. The government
should take the discourse created by VAT scam to bring about reform in VAT
regime in the country. However, the government should not forget that it
should be responsible to the real taxpayers. Accountable government should
treat all taxpayers equally and tax administration should not act in a
manner where public can feel discrimination between rich and hardcore
general public. In fact, tax money is public money and all citizens has
right to know on its spending.
*(From: www.blog.com.np)*
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*(* Siromani Dhungana is a young and prominent media scholar in Nepal.
Kathmandu-based economic journalist, researcher and media academic,
Dhungana has been appointed by the Ministry of Education’s Curriculum
Development Center to revise the journalism syllabus for grade nine and ten
as well as to rewrite journalism textbooks for the secondary level. He has
recently received Narayan Shanti Mishra Gold Medal from Nepal's Prime
Minister for his outstanding performance in academic front. He can be
contacted at: meshirom...@gmail.com)*

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