What’s in it for SMEs? Rethinking small business taxation in Uganda
In brief
- Stimulating small business growth and innovation is a road to economic prosperity, the creation of decent employment, and improved tax revenues
- Alleviating the high perceived burden of taxation and business regulation is central to incentivising the establishment and growth of MSMEs
- A heavy tax burden suppresses the growth and formalisation incentives of the same MSMEs that would significantly contribute to tax revenues if they grew, “killing the goose that lays the golden egg”
- The focus of small business taxation should move away from short-term revenue collection and towards incentivising growth and formalisation, building a compliance culture, and improving accounting capabilities
- The Government of Uganda can achieve this through reforms to the rates and thresholds applied to MSMEs and the way in which tax is administered
- In this year’s programme of work, the Government of Uganda should consider thoroughly simplifying the presumptive tax structure, and reforming the business registration and licencing system
- Future research and reform efforts should target: improving taxpayer education and outreach, pairing tax compliance with business development services, simplifying the filing process, and enhancing MSMEs’ access to tax justice
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About this series
The series informs in a concentrated form about important positions of the Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung on current topics. The individual issues present key findings and recommendations, offer brief analyses, explain the Foundation's further plans and name KAS contact persons.