Could improved tax collection strengthen democracy in Cambodia?
POSTED ON: February 9, 2016 | Cambodia - Current Affairs - Featured | By: David Hutt
With Cambodia starting to collect more tax, some argue it could increase political accountability in the Kingdom
sea-globe
Cambodia
has long been lambasted for not doing enough to collect taxes. In 2006,
for example, it collected a little over $600m. In recent years,
attempts to levy taxes on ordinary people have been met with protest but
the overall amount of tax collected has been rising. The Department of
Taxation recently announced that it collected $1.3 billion in 2015, up
21.6% from the previous year. The Department of Customs and Excise –
which collects taxes on imports and exports – has yet to release its
figures for last year. In 2014, it collected $1.34 billion.
tax, garment factories, cambiodia
Cambodian
workers in a garment factory in Phnom Penh. The Cambodian garment
industry is the largest income earner of the national economy and
employs about 500,000 mostly female workers. EPA/Mak Remissa
The
Cambodian government’s recent enthusiasm for taxation is no mere
avocation. It is a reaction to an increasing demand for more funds. In
December, it announced that the national budget for 2016 would be $4.3
billion, up 12% from last year.
However,
even with the rise, the current level of public spending is low, said
Napoleon Navarro, head of policy at the United Nations Development
Programme (UNDP) in Cambodia. The budgets of upper-middle income
countries in Southeast Asia, such as Thailand and Malaysia, are between
15 to 17% of GDP, whereas Cambodia’s is only 6%, Navarro said. If
Cambodia hopes to become an upper-middle income country and achieve its
Sustainable Development Goals’ by 2030, he added, it would need to
dramatically increase public spending in the future. And this will need
to be funded by taxation.
Traditionally,
foreign aid and favourable loans have aggrandised Cambodia’s national
budgets, while international assistance in areas such as health care,
education and poverty relief has diminished the amount the government
needs to spend on its citizens’ welfare.
Yet,
Cambodia is expected to transition from being a least-developed country
to a lower-middle income country within the next 12 months, which will
mean that foreign aid and preferable loans may be scaled back.
“Cambodia
must be prepared for this as donors would reduce developmental aid and
grants, including concessional or soft loans, and give it
less-favourable trade deals, et cetera,” Srey Chanthy, an independent
economist, told the Phnom Penh Post.
Both
of these factors – which will demand more money for the national purse
at the same time as Cambodia’s once-abundant sources of cash are drying
up – mean that tax reform is an imperative for the government.
Although
some progress has been made, this will not be easy. According to
Navarro, one of the main problems is that Cambodia’s workforce has been –
and remains – largely composed of people in “a dominant informal
sector, vulnerable employment, and subsistence agriculture”. Typically,
professions that prove difficult to tax.
And
then there is Cambodia’s quotidian corruption. To give the most stark
example: In December, a report by Washington-based Global Financial
Integrity found that between 2004 and 2013 almost $15 billion left
Cambodia illegally, mostly through ‘trade misinvoicing’. This is where
companies misstate volumes of imports or exports on shipping invoices,
and covertly move money into another country. Almost $4 billion exited
Cambodia this way in 2013, all of which was untaxed, and which was worth
four times as much as that year’s national budget.
Nevertheless,
the government does appear to be making some improvements. The taxation
department announced that there was a 27% rise in corporate profits tax
and 18.6% in income tax collected last year. And the government is
revamping the way it taxes smaller companies.
Cambodia
traditionally operated a two-tier tax structure, explains Anthony
Galliano, CEO of Cambodian Investment Management. On the one hand, there
were the ‘real regime’ taxpayers: registered companies, state-owned
companies and other businesses with some system of formal accounting. On
the other hand, there were the ‘estimated regime’ taxpayers: companies
or small ventures with no formal accounting – essentially without a
paper-trail of profits – and taxable amounts for these were estimated
based on discussions between taxpayers and tax officials.
The
Phnom Penh Post reported that in November the government set about
scrapping the ‘estimated regime’ to bring all enterprises under the
‘real’ tax regime. The publication also reported that 60% of the
country’s state tax collectors worked with ‘estimated regime’ payers,
which brought in less than 1% of the total tax revenue. In December, the
government issued a prakas – an official edict – to end the ‘estimated
regime’, creating a stricter system for small and medium enterprises.
However,
it is likely that in the foreseeable future Cambodia’s taxation system
will rely heavily on indirect taxes, as opposed to direct taxes such as
income tax and import tax. Galliano said that VAT – an indirect tax –
“contributes significantly” to the overall tax pool and is “probably the
largest tax levied” by the government.
“Over
the medium term, chances are Cambodia might have to rely on more
regressive indirect taxes to fund its development aspirations, before
putting in place a more progressive income tax system,” Navarro said.
If
taxation does increase in Cambodia, it could lead to violent scenes
like those seen last May, when protests erupted in the Cambodian town of
Poipet, on the border with Thailand, following complaints by
cross-border porters that customs-taxes were costing them most of their
daily wages. “We can barely get enough food, so we set up the strike
seeking to reduce the cost of tax,” one protestor told the Phnom Penh
Post.
Or,
more positively, the laws of unintentional consequences could mean that
higher taxation revenues could lead to improvements in democracy.
In
the 1980s, a number of Western academics and political economists
proposed a theory often called the ‘taxation-produces-representation
hypothesis’. A government that relies on taxation to fund its public
spending, the hypothesis says, is under greater pressure to be
accountable to its taxpayers, is more motivated to promote the
prosperity of taxpayers and, as citizens observe how their hard-earned
money is being spent by the government, they are more likely to speak up
and protest if they think it is being depleted improperly.
Sophal
Ear, an associate professor of diplomacy and world affairs at
Occidental College, California, and author of Aid Dependence in
Cambodia: How Foreign Assistance Undermines Democracy, has been arguing
in favour of the ‘taxation-produces-representation hypothesis’ for many
years, with a focus on Cambodia’s foreign aid ‘dependency’.
“Large
amounts of foreign aid – relative to a country’s GDP, tax revenues and
government spending, over long durations – can hurt a country’s
development and governance,” Ear said. “In Cambodia’s case, [foreign
aid] has hurt democracy because the more the authorities rely on outside
resources, the less they are incentivised to collect taxes, which are
needed for holding the authorities accountable.”
And,
according to Navarro, Cambodia’s increased reliance in taxation “could
potentially improve the bargaining position of ordinary citizens and
social movements, and strengthen the liberal democracy that Cambodia
is”.
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