KQ exempted from 1pc minimum tax

Nelly

Member
KQ is now exempted from paying the minimum tax set at one per cent of gross turnover, saving the cash-strapped airline hundreds of millions of shillings annually.

The tax shield was announced by National Treasury Secretary Ukur Yatani in a Kenya Gazette notice dated March 17, 2021.

The national carrier has been making losses over the years, which has seen it pay minimal corporate taxes. In the financial year ended December 2020, it even received a tax credit of Sh354 million.
The company, however, faced significant cash outflows from the introduction of the minimum tax on January 1, 2021, with the new levy to be paid if a firm’s normal corporate taxes fall below one percent of gross revenue.

But Mr Yatani has protected KQ, as the carrier is known by its international code, from this new tax that is designed to ensure that firms that are in perpetual losses also contribute to the State’s coffers.

“In exercise of the powers confirmed by section 13(2) of the Income Tax Act the CS for National Treasury and Planning directs that the income derived from or accrued in Kenya by an airline in which the government of Kenya owns at least 45 percent of its shares, and the subsidiaries of that airline shall be exempted from the provisions of Section 12(d) of the Act,” Mr Yatani said in the notice.

Through the National Treasury, the government holds a 48.9 per cent stake in the airline. The stake could rise to 100 per cent following the commencement of plans to nationalise the company which is considered a strategic asset with benefits to the wider economy including tourism and the horticulture sector.

Without the protection, KQ was scheduled to make its first minimum tax payment by April 20 covering the first three months of its current financial year.
The tax exemption means that the national carrier will now only pay income taxes when it returns to profitability in the future
 
Top