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Tuesday 23 May 2017

HEFTY TAXES CRIPPLE TANZANIA’S SECURITY COMPANIES

Summary 
The categorization of private security companies as ‘professional services’ has landed them with a hefty tax burden under the new 5 percent withholding tax policy. This move is crippling the security industry, while being counterproductive in its revenue-raising motive.

Dar es Salaam: WS Insight (formerly Warrior Security), a specialized risk management company says that among the new tax legislation introduced in the last year’s Finance Act was a change that has serious implications for Tanzania’s security industry. 

For the first time, private security companies have been included among the ‘professional services’ businesses that are subject to the 5 percent withholding tax – an obligation applied to higher-wage professionals in areas such as accountancy and consultancy. This re-classification of private security is causing damaging and deepening impacts to the industry.
There are fundamental differences between the financial make-ups of security companies when compared to the professional services which the 5 percent tax was originally devised to include. Professional services such as architecture and law are essentially skills- and knowledge-based. 

The security industry, by contrast, is highly manpower-intensive and engages low-skill labour in employment following a short period of training. The upshot is that security firms’ gross incomes do not far exceed the costs of meeting the payroll of guard staff. When overheads, statutory taxes and other costs are added, the result is a narrow profit margin.
 In this scenario, the requirement that a security company’s clients deduct a 5% withholding tax from their payment upfront has major ramifications for the profits and cash flow of the security company. Payment of staff wages, other tax obligations and general operational costs becomes more of a challenge. 

Furthermore, while companies in other industries are able to claim back their withholding tax payments from corporate tax, the proportionally low net profit level typical in the security industry means they are illegible for such refunds.
With the inordinate financial pressure the 5 percent tax places on security companies, the inevitable outcome is that they are forced to raise fees – both to counteract the loss of income and to try to push net profits over the 16 percent threshold above which the tax can be discounted. 

The knock-on effect of these rises will be that some security clients cancel their contracts. We might also expect company closures and for some guards to be driven out into the informal sector. All of this means fewer people employed as guards in decent, law-abiding companies and therefore less tax revenue, making the 5 percent tax not only undesirable, but counterproductive.
This comes at a time when trade unions are reporting a concerning rise in the number of workers losing their jobs in the face of a difficult business climate.
Tony Sugden, CEO and founder of WS Insight, said, “As an employer of hundreds of thousands of staff, the security industry contributes enormously to the economy and its tax revenues. Continuing to impose the thoroughly ill-fitting 5 percent withholding tax will only serve to undermine this vital contribution”.
Reversing the decision to include security companies under this additional tax burden he said, would be good for security staff, good for the industry and good for Tanzania.
***ENDS***
Notes to Editor
About WS Insight (formerly Warrior Security)
WS Insight, (formerly Warrior Security) is a specialized risk management company (a $40m business with more than 6000 employees), which has 10 years’ experience in providing bespoke and highly professional security services to clients across Africa: including complex environments such as DRC, South Sudan, Zambia, Kenya and Tanzania.Warrior Security has an unrivalled understanding of the dynamic risk environment across East & Central Africa, with clients including Tier One Mining, Oil & Gas, US State Department, USAID, UN, Diplomatic, International NGO as well as Corporate Multinational and Commercial Organizations.
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