Tag Archives: internet

[Guest Post] Are Telecoms paying the rightful tax?


My views on the proposed tax on social media. By Hon. Edward Kafufu Baliddawa (Former MP Kigulu North and former Chairman ICT Committee)

I am not yet aware of the technological mechanism that Uganda Revenue Authority (URA) will use in order to be able to collect the proposed tax on social media. Of course in order for this proposal to have life, there will be need to give it a legal basis.

However, I have always for a very long time argued and those colleagues who have served on the Parliamentary Committee on ICT will bear me witness on this. My contention is that even before we go for the taxing of social media usage, government should be collecting more taxes from the Telecom Companies. My argument has been that it’s not yet comprehensible that Uganda Revenue Authority (URA) up to date has not actualised the deployment of an Intelligence Network (IN) that would be able to let URA know precisely how much each of the Telecoms earn on a daily basis in terms of voice, data, Mobile Money, Interconnections, Co-hosting, Leased lines and hire of other infrastructure like the communication towers.

This is something we tried for over five years to emphasize for enforcement by Uganda Communications Commission (UCC) the regulator, but all fell on deaf ears. It is so sad that people in government and the regulator inclusive, can collude with the private telecoms to thwart the implementation of a mechanism that would have otherwise fetched far more money in terms of taxes to government coffers.

It is no longer a secret at all that these telecoms actually declare far much less revenue to URA than what they earn. As it is now, URA depends on the self declared total revenue by each telecom in order to calculate the tax due to URA.

So, in my view, even before one proceeds to tax social media, we should work on collecting all that is actually due to us.

As I said, for many years, I have been arguing that there is lot of money due to us as government of Uganda in form of taxes but which we have not collected from the telecoms due to what I would conclude to be simply collusion with the industry regulator and tax authorities.

Let us have a quick look at the potential earnings of these Telecoms;

According to the 2016/17 Annual Communications Sector report released by the Uganda Communications Commission (UCC), Uganda’s mobile phone subscriber base stood at 23.6 million subscribers as of June 2017. However, a report by Jumia places the figure currently at 30 million subscribers. We shall stick to the UCC statistics for now. For our calculation, let us assume that each subscriber uses at least Shs. 1,000 in airtime for voice each day.What would the calculation be like?

Each single day, the telecoms would earn a cool Shs. 23.6 Billion, making it Shs. 708 Billion monthly and annually the figure works out at Shs 8.496 Trillion. This is just Voice only.

Now, can we ask URA if this is the total gross revenue that they are using to tax these telecoms?

The story doesn’t end here. These telecoms’ other major source of revenue is data which includes data bundles we use in order to access our social media and the Internet for mail and Web surfing. The UCC report once again states that there are 13.55 million internet subscriptions. If we just assume that each of these subscribers, use only 500 shillings each day on average for data. The end result is a daily revenue of UGX Shs. 6.778 Billion daily just from data. A month yields UGX Shs 203.25 Billion while a year sees them earning UGX Shs. 2.44 Trillion.

Adding just these two service offerings yields gross revenues of UGX Shs 10.9 Trillion annually. Let us assume taxes took only 15% of this sum, that would imply that the Telecoms alone would contribute UGX 1.6 Trillion to the taxman annually. Compare this with the overall communications sector contribution of UGX 523.1 Billion for the year 2016/17. Who is fooling who?

Now friends, the above estimated earning is from just two services, thus Voice and Data. But we need to get to factor in the most lucrative sector product, the Mobile Money on which the telecoms earn “madly” and which is a continuous source of envy for the Banks. Factor in miscellaneous services like caller tunes, ring tones, cloud services, you shudder to imagine how much potential tax revenue isn’t declared.

So, I hope that you can now see why being able to collect every penny that is due to us from these telecoms would be a better move of picking the “low hanging fruits” for URA than thinking of going after the social media.

In conclusion, as I do support the President’s proposal for taxing the social media in order for government to raise enough taxes to fund the many government programs for improved service delivery, I do once again urge the Ministry of ICT in conjunction with UCC the telecoms regulator and URA to operationalize the installation of the Intelligence Network (IN) so that we can get what accrues to us as a country. Let us do first things first.

I think that these telecoms earn something close if not more than 5trn shillings each year from the Mobile Money transactions plus all the other services they offer minus data and voice.

This means that each year a total sum of about 16 Trillion shillings is grossed in combined revenue by the telecoms.

First things first, let us have the right tax being paid by those perceived to be avoiding taxation.

Hon. Edward Baliddawa Kafufu

FMR MP Kigulu North

Email: edward.baliddawa [at] gmail.com

Twitter: @ebaliddawa

Blockchain might render you Jobless or out of Business


The buzz lately is about Bitcoin and cryptocurrency trading. People are trying to figure out how to make a killing from the volatile appreciation of Bitcoins whose price hit US$ 20,000 a while back. Some governments are fighting cryptocurrencies while others have adopted the wait and see approach. Top business leaders have come out to make comments in support of or against Bitcoin.

Amidst all this, we seem to be missing the point. The issue of focusing on Bitcoin while ignoring Blockchain is akin to getting excited about the cars being driven without appreciating the road on which they are driving. Blockchain is the road on which the likes of Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies are driving themselves to public appeal.

The advent of Blockchain has redefined technology and it will likely take a couple of years before its massive impact is felt. Blockchain is a technology that replaces the middleman when it comes to transactions through the use of direct peer to peer interactions.

We have big businesses and prominent professions that have been curved out to purely act as middlemen between producers and consumers. The financial industry is littered with banks whose primary role is to enable Person A pay Person B or aggregate money from multiple depositors and lend it out to the borrowing few. In the process, they get a commission.

If you take the example of an international money transaction where an individual in Uganda is paying a supplier in China for some goods. This individual will initiate a transfer through his bank and the intermediaries are; the Ugandan’s local bank, a correspondent bank, an international clearing house, another correspondent bank and finally the Chinese supplier’s local bank. Each of these intermediaries slaps a financial surcharge on the transaction. Time is another factor that features prominently in these transactions, taking between two and four days before maturing.

This is a classic case of middlemen creating a higher burden of transacting. The effect of Bitcoin is to erase the necessity of middlemen between producers and consumers by replacing them with peer to peer systems. The infographic below illustrates this.

blockchain_diagram

Apart from the financial industry, some of the industries likely to be grossly impacted by Blockchain include the Real Estate, Insurance, Global Logistics and Shipping, Advertising and Crowdfunding.

In Uganda, if you are in need of purchasing land or renting a house, you have to engage brokers who identify the various plots of land ready for sale by their owners, pay a site visit, establish the land ownership, haggle over the price and then upon agreement, pay up before transfer of the title is effected.

Often times, there are loopholes in this process, like;

  • The land ownership could have been tampered with thereby falsely presenting someone else as the owner

  • The owner could be simultaneously peddling the same land to another buyer who might end up paying too.

  • The documentation on the land could be tampered with to hide the existence of caveats that may have been placed on the land.

  • And many more …..

Enter blockchain and its ledger approach that clearly chronicles all transaction changes of a system without giving room for illicit alterations. Software based solutions can now be developed to address the loopholes as well as ease the customer experience in this real estate sector.

Property listings can be made available on a blockchain enabled system that allows users to upload information of their property like the physical address, ownership, title information, selling or rental price among others.

The same blockchain enabled system could act as a storage of information on ownership status and history. This would then quickly allow an interested party to identify the true ownership status of the property as well as a history of transactions. Any encumbrances on the property can also be revealed at this point. Currently, this process is largely paper based and time consuming. One is expected to physically visit the Lands office, submit a request, make payments in a bank and then wait for the officials to carry out the manual search.

When it comes to agreements, Blockchain supports Smart Contracts. These are self executing contracts with the terms of the agreement between buyer and seller being directly written in the programmed software. They permit trusted transactions and agreements to be carried out among anonymous parties without the need for a lawyer. They also render the transactions traceable, transparent and irreversible.

I was once involved in a land transaction where I was given the land title for verification with the lands office, a process that took a couple of days before I could revert to the seller. During that time, he got so scared and thought that I had duped him. My delay was largely caused by the various individuals we had to go through to confirm the title ownership. All these manual steps can be circumvented by blockchain enabled systems.

In this real estate example, it is evident that land brokers, search agents and lawyers are likely to be edged out if they do not find ways of redefining their roles.

In the financial sector, money transfer agents and forex bureau operators are likely to be heavily affected.

I advise you to study your profession, see how you can take advantage of the emerging Blockchain technology and begin riding the wave before everyone else. Blockchain is the future, just like the World Wide Web was correctly predicted as the future towards the end of the last century. If you hope to remain relevant as a business or a professional, it’s time to reposition yourself.

Don’t be fooled by cryptocurrency trading because it is just a niche area displaying the massive potential of the Blockchain technology. There are a lot more opportunities yet to be unearthed. Like the Basoga say, Wakatolera (It’s just beginning).

James Wire is a Small Business and Technology Consultant

Blog: wirejames.com

Twitter: @wirejames

Email: lunghabo (at) gmail (dot) com