GEISHA KOWLESSAR-ALONZO
The repeal of property tax and the scrapping of the The T&T Revenue Authority (TTRA) has prompted Dr Daren Conrad senior lecturer and head, department of economics at the University of the West Indies, St Augustine to call on the government to lay out a comprehensive plan to the public on how it intends to run T&T’s finances.
Meanwhile, economist Dr Vaalmikki Arjoon has advised that instead of forming the TTRA to begin with, the simpler and more cost-effective solution was to strengthen the existing BIR and customs divisions and rectify their operational flaws.
Moments after 32 members of her government were sworn in at President’s House—and with most of her Cabinet seated behind her—Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar announced last Saturday that her first priority would be to dismantle TTRA.
Newly sworn-in Minister of Finance Davendranath Tancoo had also confirmed that no property tax will be introduced, promising anyone who paid that the fees would be refunded.
With property tax gone how would the new administration source revenue to fund the operation ?
In an interview with the Business Guardian, Conrad was adamant that it was a “bad move” to get rid of property tax.
“I think we should have had it a long time ago, and I don’t know why we keep playing with the issue. I thought it was great that it was implemented...I paid mine with grace, and now I’m even hearing that they’re going to be reimbursing people who already paid.
“You can’t tell me the Treasury is empty on one hand, and then be telling me that you’re not collecting property tax and you’re going to be reimbursing people. So where does that leave us in terms of revenue and other things in terms of what the government is responsible for financially? It makes no sense to me...Where additional revenue is going to come from because I’m not hearing of government undertaking any investment.
“...You can’t make financial issues political issues and expect to have financial gain at the end. It’s a net financial loss. All for what? Politics? At this time, we can’t be playing politics.We have to be objective about revenue generation,” Conrad said.
Arjoon however, noted that despite planning to implement the property tax for nine years, the last government’s implementation was a disaster causing much anxiety and frustration among the population, “giving the impression that the government was unprepared and did not know what they were doing.”
He said there were several errors in valuations, where similar residential properties in the same district received different valuations, while others received several valuations.
The previous government projected property tax revenue of $150 million for 2024 and $125 million for 2025.
“The easiest way to offset this foregone revenue is to identify areas of waste or lower priority in the budget and reallocate those funds to critical local government services that the property tax was meant to support. For example, they can rationalise some of the transfers to state enterprises, which effectively creates more fiscal space. They can also fully implement the gaming and gambling tax. Repealing the tax also means slightly higher disposable income for households, supporting spending,” Arjoon suggested.
On disbanding the TTRA, Conrad again described this move as playing politics with important issues.
“Now is not the time for that,” he cautioned adding, “We will pay in the long run for that. We will pay dearly. So, where is the revenue going to come from now? Increasing taxes? Increasing income taxes? Well, that’s the only thing left,” he said.
He reiterated that government needs to lay out its long-term plan in terms of revenue generation.
“I’m not hearing that. I’m just hearing these stop-gap measures in terms of what I’m going to do because it was an election campaign promise...And this is why I feel jilted as a taxpayer. All my taxpayer’s money is always going to be wasted and squandered by the government after the month.
“...As an economist, I can’t tell you what the long-term plan is. I have not heard it. All I’m hearing is we’re not going to do property tax but I’m not hearing what is going to be done in instead...All they need to do is stop and evaluate the importance of these things and then make a decision on them. You can’t just tell me you’re scrapping this and you’re scrapping that,” Conrad said.
Arjoon: TTRA too political
Arjoon explained that by strengthening the existing BIR and customs divisions and rectifying their operational flaws, that would have improved efficiency in tax collection and broadened the tax base by curbing tax evasion and avoidance. That would have delivered higher tax revenues and closed the $12 billion tax gap without raising tax rates.
Plus, he said the TTRA was seen as politically charged, concentrating too much power over tax enforcement in a single entity with less transparency.
“Indeed, the organisation would ultimately answer to a board, director general and deputies all appointed by the minister of finance – raising concerns about political influence in tax administration. For instance, hiring staff would be internal to the TTRA, potentially allowing a government to place loyalists in key positions or target certain taxpayers indirectly. Employees were asked to give up the job security of the public service, and sign on to the TTRA as contract employees, which could have hurt their morale and productivity. These naturally affected the confidence and trust in the TTRA,” Arjoon further explained.
Going forward there are steps that the BIR must take to strengthen and modernise tax administration, which can increase tax collection efficiency, Arjoon advised, adding that chief among these is increasing recruitment and training. He said for many years, BIR has been severely understaffed, which heightened compliance risks and revenue losses, as many businesses remain unregistered or file inaccurate and late returns.
Arjoon added that insufficient staff limits essential field visits and effective audits, hindering efforts to detect tax evasion and underreporting.
“Recruitment and training are lengthy processes – up to eight months – and the past high staff turnover emphasises the urgency of improving salary and incentive packages to retain trained personnel. Continuous training is equally vital – partnering with organisations like Caribbean Regional Technical Assistance Centre (CARTAC) or IMF’s fiscal affairs department to provide advanced training to BIR staff in transfer pricing, auditing of multinational companies etc. can improve tax collections while also cultivating a more skilful and motivated workforce,” he said.
Additionally, Arjoon said the taxpayer databases require regular updating to identify active and inactive registrants, avoiding unnecessary audit complexity.
“Audits typically target larger firms, but more resources must also be allocated to smaller business audits to address broader compliance gaps,” he said, noting that tax payments should be simple, quick and convenient – the BIR should fully implement an e-filing and e-payment system via the single electronic window to boost compliance and prompt tax payments.
This system, Arjoon said, could also serve as a unified data-exchange platform linking the BIR, customs, the registrar general, and the licensing authority, allowing for greater tax compliance – for example, land-registry records of large property sales could automatically trigger cross-checks against the purchaser’s income declarations.
Gov’t must have a plan
Economist and advocate for Caribbean development, Dr Ralph Henry believes that if government did not have a plan, it would not have made such announcements in the first place.
“I’m not fully aware of the finances, but if they say they’re going to do that, it means they are clear on how they’re going to raise revenue elsewhere. Governments have to have revenue to spend on infrastructure and social services and the like.
“I can’t pronounce clearly. They must have had their people look at it and decided where else they will find funds...And also getting rid of that structure (TTRA), they must have a clear position in doing so, what it would mean, and how at the end of the day they are going to raise money, raise revenue, source revenue.
“Governments run on the basis of revenue collected. So if they’re getting rid of one source, they must have some other source from which they will get revenue,” Henry said.
BOX
The legislative framework governing the TTRA was passed by an act of Parliament in December 2021.
The TTRA was the former PNM administration’s attempt to restructure the State’s tax collection regime and was intended to replace the Inland Revenue Division (IRD) and Customs and Excise Division (CED) and it was touted as a major asset in generating funds for the State.
In addressing the Parliament on February 24, 2023, then finance minister Colm Imbert said, “With an estimated domestic tax gap of up to $10 billion, the Government, through the TTRA, is actively seeking to address this fiscal vulnerability and close the tax gap by improving the efficiency and efficacy of the country’s revenue collection.”