Low oil prices are finally forcing the Arab sheikhdoms of the Persian Gulf to make some tough choices about how to tax their wealthy populations. For as long as oil traded at above $100 per barrel, the region could remain a largely tax-free area. That is no longer tenable.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF)expects the six members of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) - including Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates - to post average fiscal deficits in the region of 13 per cent next year after Brent crude fell below $40 per barrel. Tax is the obvious way to plug the estimated $275-billion gap.
Gulf monarchies - which produce about a fifth of the world's oil - have traditionally avoided imposing broad-based taxes on personal income, corporate profits and the sale of goods. While that means huge amounts of lost revenue, it has helped the non-oil sectors of their economies, which struggled to attract foreign direct investment, to grow.
Introducing a direct tax on incomes in countries where political rights are limited may push citizens too far. So instead, policymakers are looking at other potential levies. The IMF has said that introducing a value added tax (VAT) across the GCC could raise up to two per cent of gross domestic product in revenue.
The process has already begun. The UAE is studying a draft VAT law and ended subsidies on petrol in 2015. Saudi Arabia - the region's largest economy - has approved plans for a 2.5 per cent tax on undeveloped land to stimulate property development on crowded cities and is also reviewing its policy of energy subsidies. But there is a quid pro quo: taxation often creates the expectation of representation. Limited elections are now taking place in all of the Gulf states.
Should oil prices remain lower for longer, then GCC states may have no option other than to raise more government revenue from new taxes, or impose dramatic and unpopular cuts to spending and erode foreign reserves. Tax may come at a cost of further political and social concessions, but that looks like an increasingly unavoidable trade-off.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF)expects the six members of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) - including Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates - to post average fiscal deficits in the region of 13 per cent next year after Brent crude fell below $40 per barrel. Tax is the obvious way to plug the estimated $275-billion gap.
Gulf monarchies - which produce about a fifth of the world's oil - have traditionally avoided imposing broad-based taxes on personal income, corporate profits and the sale of goods. While that means huge amounts of lost revenue, it has helped the non-oil sectors of their economies, which struggled to attract foreign direct investment, to grow.
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The process has already begun. The UAE is studying a draft VAT law and ended subsidies on petrol in 2015. Saudi Arabia - the region's largest economy - has approved plans for a 2.5 per cent tax on undeveloped land to stimulate property development on crowded cities and is also reviewing its policy of energy subsidies. But there is a quid pro quo: taxation often creates the expectation of representation. Limited elections are now taking place in all of the Gulf states.
Should oil prices remain lower for longer, then GCC states may have no option other than to raise more government revenue from new taxes, or impose dramatic and unpopular cuts to spending and erode foreign reserves. Tax may come at a cost of further political and social concessions, but that looks like an increasingly unavoidable trade-off.