Kenya yakusanya kodi mara mbili ya Tanzania - pesa yetu ya ndan

Kenya yakusanya kodi mara mbili ya Tanzania - pesa yetu ya ndan

MK254

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Ukitaka kujinasibu kuwa mwenye uwezo wa kufanya makubwa kwa pesa ya ndani, jitahidi kulipa kodi, la sivyo mtajidanganya kuwa mnafanya vitu kwa pesa ya ndani huku mkizinyima idara muhimu hela, watu nchi yote wanaishia kilio huku mkinunua mindege inayoishia kuegeshwa bila kuingiza kipato cha maana.
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Total tax collections in the financial year ended last month increased by Sh100.1 billion to Sh1.44 trillion, but fell short of the Treasury-set target by Sh72.7 billion.
A new Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) report shows the tax agency recorded a 7.47 percent growth over Sh1.34 trillion collected in the year ended June 2018.
The amount does not include fees and levies KRA collected on behalf of other State agencies.
The tax receipts, however, missed the fresh goal of Sh1.5 trillion set by suspended Treasury secretary Henry Rotich last month, from the previous Sh1.61 trillion set last December.
The Budget Policy Statement 2018 originally set a tax goal of Sh1.69 trillion, but the Treasury has been revising the target to align with economic growth projections, parliamentary amendments and court rulings that affect tax collections.
Budget deficit
Shortfalls in revenue collection targets widen the country’s budget deficit, which is bridged through increased borrowing to meet the government’s recurrent and development spending on infrastructure projects such as roads, bridges, power plants and transmission lines.
The Treasury had in May revised upwards the target for expensive commercial loans, largely syndicated loans from commercial banks and Eurobond, by Sh74.65 billion from the Sh287.95 billion previously budgeted.
The growth in commercial loans to Sh362.6 billion in the fiscal year under review was largely on the weight of $2.1 billion (Sh217.98 billion) third Eurobond that the Treasury successfully issued on May 15 in two tranches of seven and 12 years.
New York-based credit rating agency, Fitch Ratings, had in a note on May 7 warned that weak growth in revenue, largely tax receipts, presented the biggest challenge to Kenya’s effort to balance its budget.

"A combination of structural and administrative issues has caused revenue/GDP (gross domestic product) to stagnate in recent years.
Some of this is the result of agriculture being a large component of the economy and most of the non-export agricultural output coming from un-taxed smallholders," Fitch analysts wrote in the report.
Muted growth
"In addition, weak tax compliance and the expansion of tax exemptions have muted domestic revenue growth."
The shortfall in tax target for the just ended year means the immediate former KRA commissioner-general John Njiraini, who left office at the end of June, missed the targets by a cumulative Sh261 billion in his last four years in office.
He missed targets by Sh95.2 billion in the year ended June 2018, Sh64.5 billion a year earlier and Sh28.6 billion in the 2015-16 fiscal year.
The under-performance was foreseen by Mr Njiraini who, in January, had projected a shortfall for the year ending June 2019, citing a slowdown in income tax receipts on the back of reduced corporate earnings that hit creation of new jobs.
"The prolonged (2017) elections significantly affected businesses. We are largely getting out of it, but we are not out of it," he said in an interview on January 16.
"We still have businesses complaining and expressing concerns regarding the (the slow) pick-up of economic activities and sluggish demand, and, therefore, affecting bottom-line in terms of profitability."
Businesses have since last year complained about the accumulating pending bills amid reduced access to credit for compounding cash flow challenges, thus hurting new investments, profitability and jobs.
 
Ukitaka kujinasibu kuwa mwenye uwezo wa kufanya makubwa kwa pesa ya ndani, jitahidi kulipa kodi, la sivyo mtajidanganya kuwa mnafanya vitu kwa pesa ya ndani huku mkizinyima idara muhimu hela, watu nchi yote wanaishia kilio huku mkinunua mindege inayoishia kuegeshwa bila kuingiza kipato cha maan
Tatizo sio ukusanyaji wa kodi bali matumizi mazuri ya hiyo kodi.
 
Tatizo sio ukusanyaji wa kodi bali matumizi mazuri ya hiyo kodi.

Ndio maana pengo la uchumi baina yetu linazidi kuongezeka kiasi cha kuwa karibia ya mara mbili yenu. Acheni ukajanja mwingi mlipe kodi ili kuipa serikali yenu uwezo wa kutumia pesa za ndani kwenye miradi bila kutesa idara nyeti hadi watu wote wanalia kwamba vyuma vimekaza.
 
Halafu nusu ya hiyo pesa mkizubaa itapigwa na wahuni tu.

Mdhibiti na ufisadi basi.
 
Ukitaka kujinasibu kuwa mwenye uwezo wa kufanya makubwa kwa pesa ya ndani, jitahidi kulipa kodi, la sivyo mtajidanganya kuwa mnafanya vitu kwa pesa ya ndani huku mkizinyima idara muhimu hela, watu nchi yote wanaishia kilio huku mkinunua mindege inayoishia kuegeshwa bila kuingiza kipato cha maana.
----------------------------

Total tax collections in the financial year ended last month increased by Sh100.1 billion to Sh1.44 trillion, but fell short of the Treasury-set target by Sh72.7 billion.
A new Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) report shows the tax agency recorded a 7.47 percent growth over Sh1.34 trillion collected in the year ended June 2018.
The amount does not include fees and levies KRA collected on behalf of other State agencies.
The tax receipts, however, missed the fresh goal of Sh1.5 trillion set by suspended Treasury secretary Henry Rotich last month, from the previous Sh1.61 trillion set last December.
The Budget Policy Statement 2018 originally set a tax goal of Sh1.69 trillion, but the Treasury has been revising the target to align with economic growth projections, parliamentary amendments and court rulings that affect tax collections.
Budget deficit
Shortfalls in revenue collection targets widen the country’s budget deficit, which is bridged through increased borrowing to meet the government’s recurrent and development spending on infrastructure projects such as roads, bridges, power plants and transmission lines.
The Treasury had in May revised upwards the target for expensive commercial loans, largely syndicated loans from commercial banks and Eurobond, by Sh74.65 billion from the Sh287.95 billion previously budgeted.
The growth in commercial loans to Sh362.6 billion in the fiscal year under review was largely on the weight of $2.1 billion (Sh217.98 billion) third Eurobond that the Treasury successfully issued on May 15 in two tranches of seven and 12 years.
New York-based credit rating agency, Fitch Ratings, had in a note on May 7 warned that weak growth in revenue, largely tax receipts, presented the biggest challenge to Kenya’s effort to balance its budget.

"A combination of structural and administrative issues has caused revenue/GDP (gross domestic product) to stagnate in recent years.
Some of this is the result of agriculture being a large component of the economy and most of the non-export agricultural output coming from un-taxed smallholders," Fitch analysts wrote in the report.
Muted growth
"In addition, weak tax compliance and the expansion of tax exemptions have muted domestic revenue growth."
The shortfall in tax target for the just ended year means the immediate former KRA commissioner-general John Njiraini, who left office at the end of June, missed the targets by a cumulative Sh261 billion in his last four years in office.
He missed targets by Sh95.2 billion in the year ended June 2018, Sh64.5 billion a year earlier and Sh28.6 billion in the 2015-16 fiscal year.
The under-performance was foreseen by Mr Njiraini who, in January, had projected a shortfall for the year ending June 2019, citing a slowdown in income tax receipts on the back of reduced corporate earnings that hit creation of new jobs.
"The prolonged (2017) elections significantly affected businesses. We are largely getting out of it, but we are not out of it," he said in an interview on January 16.
"We still have businesses complaining and expressing concerns regarding the (the slow) pick-up of economic activities and sluggish demand, and, therefore, affecting bottom-line in terms of profitability."
Businesses have since last year complained about the accumulating pending bills amid reduced access to credit for compounding cash flow challenges, thus hurting new investments, profitability and jobs.


With corruptions the all collections are naughty.
 
My swahili is worse than English.
Take evening classes, read books and papers, engage in conversation with everyone and everybody speaking Swahili or English, you'll get better, learn a phrase everyday. And you're right, keep on posting your gibberish in JF, the more members will correct you, the better you'll get.
 
In the same yr we sent 450b of the 1.4tr to pay debt which is 32%. Tz used 43% of what they collected in the very same year.
 
In the same yr we sent 450b of the 1.4tr to pay debt which is 32%. Tz used 43% of what they collected in the very same year.
While most of what u collect pay salaries to ur MPs as u can't set aside even money to build 1 km of SGR! Nothing to brag about!
 
Tatizo sio ukusanyaji wa kodi bali matumizi mazuri ya hiyo kodi.
Uongo wewe Chamoto that's a fool's errand.Tatizo la kukula tu ni kujipata unategemea misaada ya wageni kila wakati -sisi Kenya we learn how to fish efficiently sio kama nyie .
 
While most of what u collect pay salaries to ur MPs as u can't set aside even money to build 1 km of SGR! Nothing to brag about!
Ona huyu mjinga wa mwisho. Kenya only uses 4 to 5 billion shillings on MP's as salaries and benefits,
 
Ona huyu mjinga wa mwisho. Kenya only uses 4 to 5 billion shillings on MP's as salaries and benefits,
Na unapokea food donations mpaka Leo! Mara from Dubai mara from China! How about recurrent expenditures? Give that money to JPM n the SGR will be in Mwanza already!
 
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