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GRA going after VAT cheats; VAT exemption criteria to be overhauled

Last Updated on Monday, 8 August 2016, 13:36 by Denis Chabrol

Commissioner General of the Guyana Revenue Authority (GRA), Godfrey Statia. In background is Finance Minister, Winston Jordan.

Commissioner General of the Guyana Revenue Authority (GRA), Godfrey Statia. In background is Finance Minister, Winston Jordan.

Commissioner General of the Guyana Revenue Authority (GRA), Godfrey Statia on Monday  announced that tax agents would be deployed to go after businesses that cheat the 16 percent Value Added Tax (VAT) amounting to billions of dollars.

“We also have to shift our resources into the enforcement mode and go behind the businesses for them to comply so we are looking more at enforcement, compliance, investigations and further examinations so as to increase in the VAT collections,” he told a news conference that he shared with the Finance Minister, Winston Jordan.

In the area of VAT leakages, he estimates that in many instances at least GYD$4 million per shipping container entering the country’s ports. “That is why you have to shift emphasis and do more post-clearance audit and more investigations and these things,” he said.

Statia said moves are also being made to overhaul the criteria for granting VAT exemptions that amount to as much as GYD$20 billion for the first half of 2016. “What we are trying to do is to tighten it whereby ourselves, the Ministry of Finance, Go-Invest and GRA we sit down and get set criteria (by which we could grant exemptions) rather than being granted on a willy-nilly basis as I have seen,” he said.  The exemptions were granted by the Guyana Office for Investment (GO-Invest) as part of investment agreements with companies. He said he has found n

At the same time, he announced that GRA has begun clearing off years of VAT refunds dating back to 2013. Already, the tax collection agency has paid out GYD$2 billion in refunds for the year and that is projected to grow to GYD$5 billion by year end.

The Finance Minister said the VAT refunds were among some of the heavy financial burdens that the coalition government has inherited.