Monday 29 October 2012

Invitation to the screening of the movie ‘’We’re Not Broke” and thereafter a discussion on the state of tax justice in Kenya


                                                                                                                             Invitation to the screening of the movie ‘’We’re Not Broke” and thereafter a discussion on the state of tax justice in Kenya

Where: Arfa Lounge Bar, 20 Century Plaza, Mama Ngina Street
When: 31st October 2012
Time: 5.00pm
Host: Tax Justice Network -Africa
Free Entry

WE’RE NOT BROKE tells the story of U.S. corporations dodging billions in income tax and how seven fed-up Americans take their frustration to the streets … and vow to make the corporations pay their fair share.

“Stand up for tax justice in Kenya. Demand fairness in revenue collection”


RSVP to Ann Njeru at communications@taxjustice.net



1st global training under the Capacity for Research and Advocacy for Fair Taxation (CRAFT)


1st global training under the Capacity for Research and Advocacy for Fair Taxation (CRAFT),30th October to 2nd November 2012, Nairobi, Kenya.
The CRAFT project seeks to enhance the technical and advocacy capacity of targeted civil society organizations in order to enable them to bring about an agenda for change and mobilize public pressure for tax justice.
The specific objectives of the 1st training  
ü  To provide basic insights on how taxation works;
ü  To enable participants to analyze the tax system of a selected country, propose change and stage action.
The training will be based on CRAFT training modules 1 and 2 and will cover the following topics:
From module 1:
ü  A definition of the concept of taxation and how it relates to State development;
ü  An analysis of  the role of taxation in developing economies;
ü  An explanation of the different types of taxes;
ü  Definition of key terms used in taxation.

From module 2:

ü  A thorough discussion of key concepts in the tax justice campaign such as tax avoidance, tax evasion, illicit financial flows, secrecy jurisdictions/tax havens, corruption tax competition and tax expenditure;
ü  A discussion on the national tax architecture (using a specific country as example e.g. Uganda) and an analysis of the former with regard to the global financial architecture;
ü  An introduction to power analysis tools and institutional change methods with regard to the specific national context;
ü  Concrete case studies of the issues mentioned above will be shared and discussed.

Trainers will be drawn from various institutions working on taxation and specifically involved in the tax justice campaign such as: TJN-A, other regional or national chapters of TJN, the Tax Justice International secretariat, Action Aid and Afrodad.
Trainees will be representatives of the country lead partners for the CRAFT project and any other relevant civil society organization involved in the tax justice campaign.
Note: The film ‘We are not broke’ will be screened during one of the evenings to the training (e.g. day 2) for participants to the training. WE’RE NOT BROKE tells the story of U.S. corporations dodging billions in income tax and how seven fed-up Americans take their frustration to the streets … and vow to make the corporations pay their fair share.

Capacity for Research and Advocacy for Fair Taxation (CRAFT) is a project of Oxfam Novib and TJN-A. In this project, Oxfam Novib (ON), Tax Justice Network-Africa (TJN-A) and its partners mobilize civil society forces in several countries in Africa, Middle East and Asia (Uganda, Mali,       Senegal, Nigeria,  Egypt and Bangladesh) on tax justice, with a view to achieve accountable, fair and pro-poor tax systems. This is supported by Third World Network Africa (TWN-A), which gives expertise in the area of mining and taxation. The International Budget Partnership (IBP) and Tax Justice Network-International Secretariat (TJN-IS) are also associated with CRAFT. 




Monday 8 October 2012

Africa's mineral wealth hardly denting poverty levels, says World Bank


Africa's mineral wealth hardly denting poverty levels, says World Bank

Report finds discovery of oil and mineral resources doing little to improve prospects for poor people, whose lot may even worsen
Strong economic growth in the past decade among African countries rich in oil and minerals has failed to make a significant dent on their poverty levels, according to a World Bank report.
Africa's Pulse, a twice-yearly analysis of Africa's economic prospects, noted that the decline in poverty rates in resource-rich countries has generally lagged behind that of countries without riches in the ground. Some countries, such as Angola, Congo-Brazzaville and Gabon, have witnessed an increase in the percentage of the population living in extreme poverty.
The report confirms the common perception that, to a large extent, the benefits of growth have not reached the poorest segments of society. It raises questions for aid donors and African governments on how to deal with the "resource curse", with strikes in South African mines providing a stark illustration of what is at stake.
"Resource-rich African countries have to make the conscious choice to invest in better health, education, and jobs, and less poverty for their people, because it will not happen automatically when countries strike it rich," said Shantayanan Devarajan, the World Bank's chief economist forAfrica, and lead author of Africa's Pulse. "Gabon, for example, with a per-capita income of $10,000 (£6,200) has one of the lowest child immunisation rates in Africa."
How to ensure that natural resources benefit the general population, not just the elite, is a question likely to grow more acute as discoveries of oil, gas and other minerals in African countries are expected to generate considerable wealth in the future.
The region's established oil producers represent less than 10% of the share of both global reserves and annual production. Nigeria, Africa's biggest oil producer, can keep supplying at 2011 levels for another 41 years, while Angola, the second largest producer in the region, has about 21 years remaining at current production levels before its known reserves are depleted.
With such sizeable reserves, it is likely the dependence on oil resources in these countries will continue. Production in new mineral countries such as Ghana, Mozambique, Sierra Leone and Uganda could last for a substantial number of years.
Others have considerable mineral resources. In 2010, Guinea represented more than 8% of total world bauxite production; Zambia and the Democratic Republic of the Congo have a combined share of 6.7% of the total world copper production; and Ghana and Mali together account for 5.8% of total world gold production.
Africa's Pulse underlines the continent's heavy dependence oncommodities for its recent growth, although domestic demand has played its part. Sub-Saharan Africa is expected to grow at 4.8% in 2012, broadly unchanged from 4.9% growth in 2011, and is largely on track despite setbacks in the global economy. Excluding South Africa, the continent's largest economy, growth in sub-Saharan Africa is forecast to rise to 6%.
While African economies have not been immune to the crisis in the eurozone, the World Bank said consistently high commodity prices and strong export growth in countries with mineral discoveries in recent years have fuelled economic activity and are expected to underpin economic growth for the rest of the year.
A measure of the continent's economic success is strong investor interest. "An important indicator of how Africa is on the move is that investor interest in the region remains strong, with $31bn in foreign direct investment flows expected this year, despite difficult global conditions," said Makhtar Diop, World Bank vice-president for Africa.
The report noted that, after 10 years of high growth, an increasing number of countries are moving into "middle-income" status, defined as those countries reaching more than $1,000 per-capita income. Of 48 countries, 22 with a combined population of 400 million have officially achieved middle-income status.
But there are risks, with a fragile global economic recovery posing the greatest threat. A "hard landing" for the Chinese economy would adversely affect growth prospects. Over the past decade, sub-Saharan exports to China have risen from 5% to around 19.3% in 2010, with producers of oil (Sudan, Congo) and metal and mineral exporters (Zambia, Mauritania, the Democratic Republic of the Congo) among countries heavily dependent on Chinese appetite for commodities.
The report noted that oil-rich countries systematically perform worse than any other country groups in terms of voice and accountability, political stability, rule of law and the control of corruption. Chad and Sudan are the worst performers, according to the World Bank, and their governanceindicators improved little between 2000-2010.
Anti-poverty campaigners have been pressing for more transparency and accountability in the natural resource sector as a way of putting pressure on governments. A focus of such efforts is the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative, which provides an internationally-recognised framework for public disclosure by mining companies and governments of what they pay and earn respectively. However, the initiative is voluntary, leaving implementation to those who sign up.
A European parliamentary committee last month approved a measure requiring EU oil, gas, mining and timber companies to publish their payments to foreign governments. The vote puts the world on track to create strong global transparency standards with equivalent rules in the EU and the US.

Wednesday 3 October 2012

The Nairobi Declaration on Taxation and Development


The Nairobi Declaration on Taxation and Development

The Nairobi Declaration on Taxation and Development is a policy document signed by individuals organisations and networks around the world following extensive research on the problems facing sub-Saharan countries at the Pan-African Conference on Taxation and Development held in Nairobi on the 25th - 26th March 2010.

The Nairobi Declaration on Taxation and Development makes demands on African governments, revenue authorities, Multinational Corporations, civil society organisations, research institutes, aid donors as well as African regional bodies to make reforms in the following areas.

i) Domestic Taxation
ii) Revenues from natural resource extraction
iii) International taxation


http://www.taxjusticeafrica.net/sites/default/files/The%20Nairobi%20Declaration%20on%20Taxation%20and%20Development%20final.pdf

Tuesday 2 October 2012


SEC Adopts Transparency Rules for Landmark Extractives Industry Law


Source: GFI ;  http://www.gfintegrity.org/content/view/573/70/http://www.gfintegrity.org/content/view/573/70/

WASHINGTON, DC
 – More than two years after the enactment of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) today voted to adopt implementing rules for Section 1504 of the legislation, which requires companies operating in the oil, gas, and mining sectors to publicly report on the payments they make to foreign governments. The release of the rules enables Section 1504 to finally take effect, and the effected companies will shortly need to begin reporting as required by law.

While Global Financial Integrity (GFI), a Washington-based research and advocacy organization which supports the transparency law, cannot yet definitively comment on the content of the implementing rules—the organization is currently in the process of thoroughly reviewing the regulations—GFI welcomed the scheduling of today’s vote and noted both some heartening and discouraging language from the SEC meeting.

“We are happy to see the SEC move forward with issuing rules today for Section 1504,” said Heather Lowe, Legal Counsel and Director of Government Affairs at GFI.  “After all, we’re more than a year past the April 2011 deadline for releasing the rules required by law.”

“We are very heartened by statements made by SEC staff at the meeting suggesting that the implementing rules will not provide exemptions on reporting information for countries that may forbid such disclosure,” added Lowe.  “Still, there were some comments made by SEC staff about provisions of the rules that were concerning to us.  Until we review the rules carefully, we cannot verify the accuracy or strength of any of those comments.”

Section 1504, also known as the Cardin-Lugar provision, has garnered praise from civil society groups around the world as an historic measure to bring increased stability, accountability, and transparency to a multi-billion dollar, global industry.

“As legislated, Cardin-Lugar will help combat everything from undisclosed investor risk to tax evasion to corruption,” noted Ms.  Lowe.  “It is a game changer, put simply, for good corporate governance efforts worldwide as well as for governance efforts in the countries in which extractive companies operate.”

GFI estimates that developing countries lose roughly $1 trillion per year to crime, corruption and tax evasion, much of which is facilitated by opacity in the global financial system.  The organization explained that the transparency measures included in Sec. 1504 could help significantly curtail these illicit outflows.

For example, Libya—the tenth biggest oil exporter worldwide—lost $43.32 billion in illicit outflows from 2000-2009, according to GFI’s research.  Over the weekend, Najwa al-Beshti, the former head of contracts at Libya’s state-owned oil company, wrote in The New York Times that she witnessed “systemic underpricing of oil and the discounting of prices for select foreign companies.”  Ms. al-Beshti goes on to argue that Section 1504 “can help prevent such corruption from happening again,” thereby helping to “prevent future tyrants from emerging.”

“If the SEC’s implementing rules issued today are strong, they will help curtail corruption, money laundering, and corporate tax evasion in Libya, Angola, Nigeria and elsewhere,” added Lowe.  “It would be a significant advancement for the developing world and for investors.”

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