Five years passed since the implementation of Excise Tax
in the UAE
Federal Tax Authority: Positive
effects reflecting the success of implementing Excise Tax
·
The success of Excise
Tax is marked by a host of positive results, including a 375% growth in the
number of registrants, bringing the total to 1,469 registrants by the end of
September 2022.
·
Registered Excise
Goods grew to 30,834 products registered in the FTA’s database.
·
H.E. Khalid Al
Bustani: We have recorded a continuous improvement results and
performance indicators, made possible by growing tax awareness and the
flexibility and easiness of tax procedures.
Abu
Dhabi, UAE - 19 October 2022
– The Federal Tax Authority (FTA) asserted that the implementation of Excise
Tax has been a great success in all aspects, whether in relation to the
implementation mechanisms that have been continuously developed in accordance
with international best practices, or in relation to encouraging cooperation
from sectors of taxable businesses. Other indicators have also revealed
generally positive results, demonstrating that the roll-out of Excise Tax has
achieved its main objectives.
The review was part of a press
statement the Authority issued to mark the five-year anniversary of the
implementation of Excise Tax, which went into effect in the UAE as of 1 October
2017, and was applied to carbonated beverages at a rate of 50%, as well as tobacco
products and energy drinks at 100%. As of 1 December 2019, the scope of Excise
Goods was expanded to include sweetened drinks, which became subject to a rate
of 50%, and electronic smoking devices and tools along with the liquids used within
at a rate of 100%, as per Cabinet Decision No. 52 of 2019 on Excise Goods,
Excise Tax Rates, and the Methods of Calculating the Excise Price.
The FTA revealed that the
total number of Excise Tax registrants grew continuously from 309 by the end of
2017 to 430 by the end of 2018, at a growth rate of 39.16%. The total increased
by 60.47% to 690 registrants by the end of 2019, and subsequently by 45.36% to hit
1,003 registrants by the end of 2020, and by another 22.33% to reach 1,227
registrants by the end of 2021. An additional growth rate of 19.72% was
recorded in the first nine months of the current year, where the total number of
registrants reached 1,469 by the end of September 2022. Overall, this marks a cumulative
growth of 375.41% between the end of 2017 and the end of September 2022.
On a similar note, the
Authority stated that the total number of products registered as Excise Goods
in its database increased from 3,078 products by the end of 2017 to 5,275 by the
end of 2018, registering an increase rate of 71.38%. The number then increased
to 11,469 – a significant growth rate of 117.35% – by the end of 2019, as the Decision
to expand the scope of Excise Goods went into effect. It increased again by
71.76% to 19,692 products by the end of 2020, then by 37.3% to 27,037 products
by the end of 2021, and continued to increase by 14.04% during the first nine
months of 2022, reaching 30,834 products in September. The numbers reveal a
staggering cumulative growth rate of 901.75% between the end of 2017 and
September 2022. The list of Excise Goods is periodically reviewed and adjusted,
when necessary, as per the policy to review the list of FTA-approved prices for
Excise Goods.
The Authority noted that the Committee
for Setting and Approving Prices of Excise Goods continues to meet regularly as
it is mandated with setting and approving the prices of goods subject to excise
tax, identifying and classifying goods, and processing requests from retailers
and stores to change prices or the classification of goods in accordance with
specific requirements. The Committee held a total of 70 meetings since Excise Tax first went into effect and until the end
of the third quarter of 2022.
Accomplishments and
positive results
The FTA’s Director General,
His Excellency Khalid Ali Al Bustani, stated that the Authority has made
continuous progress on performance efficiency and indicators over the past few
years, introducing development projects in all areas of its work in accordance
with its plans. The FTA continued its efforts to administer, collect, and enforce
federal taxes, adopting seamless, transparent, and clear mechanisms using
advanced integrated electronic systems.
H.E. the FTA Director General pointed out the growing
cooperation and responsiveness from taxable persons with the Federal Tax Authority
and their commitment to submitting their tax returns and paying due taxes on
time, highlighting the constant communication lines that the FTA maintains with
businesses to address any obstacles that may affect their business growth or hinder
their tax compliance, and underlining the Authority’s efforts to continuously develop
its services and systems to ensure the seamless implementation of the tax
system.
H.E. Al Bustani added, “over
the past five years of implementing Excise Tax in the UAE, the Federal Tax Authority
made a series of notable accomplishments and recorded impressive results, which
helped enhance the tremendous efforts made to implement the directives of our
wise leadership to make the UAE one of the best countries in the world across
all sectors, and maintaining the UAE’s advanced and competitive position, is in
line with the ‘Principles of the 50’, which are a reference point for working
in the government sector over the next five decades, guiding all efforts to build
a sustainable economy and channel all resources towards shaping a more
prosperous society.”
“The introduction of Excise
Tax in the last quarter of 2017 and its expansion in 2019 form part of the
government’s policies to preserve public health and its commitment to changing
harmful consumption patterns, in an effort to minimise the damage caused by
diseases,” H.E. Al Bustani explained. “Excise Tax is an indirect tax paid by
the end consumer and imposed on goods that are harmful to public health or the
environment.”
H.E. stated that the mechanisms
used for implementing Excise Tax and the developments that the system has undergone
over the past few years earned praise from relevant authorities. The successful application of these procedures strengthened
efforts to combat smoking and the consumption of tobacco and tobacco products,
and limit the consumption of harmful goods that adversely affect human health
or the environment.
Expanding the scope of
Excise Goods
H.E. Al
Bustani stated that “The decision to expand the scope of Excise
Goods meant that the excise tax scope would include sweetened drinks,
electronic smoking devices and tools and the liquids used within, in addition
to tobacco and tobacco products, energy
drinks, and carbonated beverages. The
decision followed directives from the wise leadership to accelerate the pace of
progress towards a safe and healthy society, by reducing the consumption
of harmful goods, preventing the damage they inflict onto the community, and
combating diseases resulting from consumption patterns harmful to public
health, in addition to developing the resources needed to support the expansion
of government services to members of the community.”
“Nearly three years after
implementing the decision to expand the scope of Excise Goods, significant
positive results have been registered,” H.E. added. “For
example, indicators show that many companies producing drinks in general have
developed their production processes in response to the decision, leading to an
expansion in the production and sale of unsweetened beverages (free of added
sugar), which helps improve consumption patterns in the community and ultimately
enhance public health by reducing rates of obesity, diabetes, tooth decay, and
other diseases caused by the excessive consumption of sugars.”
“Business sectors were highly
cooperative in meeting requirements for implementing Excise Tax, which was made
possible by the easiness of the steps outlined by the Federal Tax Authority for
taxpayers to follow when submitting their tax returns and paying their due
taxes round the clock through the e-Services portal on the FTA’s official
website, www.tax.gov.ae,
which was developed according to best practices to provide information and
instructions, raise tax awareness, and establish a developed environment that encourages business sectors to self-comply
with tax requirements.”
Developing the
legislative environment
The Federal Tax Authority
indicated that a wide range of laws, decisions, and awareness material related
to Excise Tax were issued as part of the continuous plans to develop the
legislative and regulatory tax environment, and encourage compliance with tax
laws in general, and excise tax laws in particular. This included 21
legislations related to Excise Tax as well as other tax procedure legislations
that also apply to Excise Tax, 12 Public Clarifications, 107 PriVATe Clarifications,
and 30 Guides and User Guides on Excise Tax, in addition to legislations,
clarifications, and guides related to tax procedures in general that also apply
to Excise Tax.
The FTA went on to explain
that as part of its continuous processes, the Authority has developed its
electronic system to be more accurate in the procedures for registering Excise
Goods and the relevant details, outlining clear standards and requirements.
Upgrades were also made to templates tax declarations and returns for Excise
Tax; all relevant business sectors were then invited to abide by the updated
procedures for registering Excise Goods in the FTA’s system, as well as to
review the documents and requirements for the registration process to begin preparing
them before submitting an application for registration in
the system.
The FTA’s press statement
confirmed that the continuous development of monitoring and control tools on
which the FTA relies on contributed towards increasing tax compliance and
raising the efficiency of inspections, using the most advanced digital
technologies in monitoring and inspection processes to track smuggled products
that have not met their tax requirements. The most prominent of these tools are
the Digital Tax Stamps on tobacco and tobacco products, which were implemented
in accordance with the Cabinet Decision on Marking Tobacco and Tobacco
Products, with the aim of establishing a comprehensive, accurate, and effective
control framework to support the Authority’s efforts to collect taxes, combat
tax evasion, ensure that tobacco and tobacco products conform to approved
standards and specifications, and verify that these products have met their tax
obligations. The Digital Tax Stamps allow for tracking tobacco and tobacco products
electronically from the production facility and until they reach the end
consumer.
The Authority noted that as of
the beginning of 2019, the first phase of the Scheme went into effect with
Digital Tax Stamps placed on tobacco and tobacco products for all types of
cigarettes. As of 1 November 2019, the Scheme entered its second phase,
expanding to include all types of waterpipe tobacco (Mu’assel) and
electronically heated cigarettes in addition to regular cigarettes. Following
that, as of 1 January 2021, the sale and possession of all types of waterpipe
tobacco and electronically heated cigarettes that do not bear the Digital Tax
Stamps were banned across local markets. Another step forward was then taken
from 1 October 2021, and then 1 January 2022, respectively, with the launch of
the first and second phases of the transition towards the new, redesigned
Digital Tax Stamps, to be installed on packages of all types of cigarettes and other
tobacco products traded in the UAE.
InnoVATive solutions
for combating tax evasion
The Federal Tax Authority
explained that Digital Tax Stamps are one of a range of innoVATive solutions
developed to combat tax evasion, facilitate inspections and control at customs points
and markets, and prevent the sale of products that do not meet their tax
obligations. The Stamps are installed on packages of tobacco products and
registered in the FTA’s database; each stamp includes information that is
electronically registered and can be read using a special device to verify that
all due tax on these products has been paid.
According to the press
statement, stemming out of the FTA’s commitment to strengthening community
control over local markets, limiting cases of tax evasion, and enhancing
transparency and competitiveness in the field of doing business, the Authority launched the Whistle Blower
Programme for Tax Violations and Evasion – also known as ‘Raqeeb’ – as of 15
April 2022, in line with the Cabinet Decision on the Implementation of the Whistle
Blower Programme for Tax Violations and Evasion, which authorises the FTA to
receive reports from individuals about cases of tax evasion, tax-related fraud,
and violations of tax legislation, where the Authority then verifies the
reports and offers financial rewards to whistle blowers provided that certain
conditions are met.
The FTA asserted that its
strategic partnerships with relevant authorities in the public and priVATe
sectors are among the main factors for its success in implementing the tax
system in general, and the Excise Tax system in particular. These partnerships
set the stage for accomplishing important goals, most notably raising tax
awareness among the business and consumer sectors, where the FTA organised –
and continues to organise – awareness seminars and workshops to answer
taxpayers’ enquiries.
The Authority added that as
part of these partnerships, control and inspection efforts continue to take
place, in collaboration between the Federal Tax Authority; the Ministry of
Economy; Federal Authority for Identity, Citizenship, Customs & Port Security;
Departments of Economic Development, and other relevant entities, who carry out
joint inspection campaigns in coordination with relevant authorities to protect
consumers’ rights, combat tax evasion, and ensure compliance with tax legislation
and procedures.
Effective control
The Federal Tax Authority asserted
that the effective control procedures that were put in place served to boost
compliance among taxpayers with tax legislations. The FTA noted that the
frequency of field inspection campaigns implemented across local markets, in
collaboration with its strategic partners, has been on the rise over the past few
years and the first half of this year. The number of inspection visits more
than doubled from 5,031 in 2019 to 10,935 in 2020. The total number continued
to increase, rising to 19,048 visits in 2021; meanwhile, the FTA and its
partners carried out 9,956 inspection visits in the first half of 2022,
compared to 4,878 visits conducted in the same period in 2021. Overall, the
total number of inspection visits conducted by the FTA within local markets over
the course of the past few years, in addition to the first half of this year,
amounted to 44,970 visits.