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A new Value Added Tax (VAT) is to be introduced in the Gulf States with effect from 1 January 2018.
Outline details of the tax are set out in a Treaty issued by the GCC in May 2017 which will be supplemented by Regulations and Guidance issued by the States.
This article is the first of a series of articles on GS VAT and provides an overview of how it will operate.
This is the first of a series of articles on the new VAT to be introduced in the Gulf States.
In May 2017, The Unified Gulf Cooperation Council Value added Tax Framework Agreement (the "Framework Agreement") was published in furtherance of the GC Council's resolution in December 2015 to introduce a tax on consumption across the GCC Member States (the "GS"). It is clear that the Framework Agreement has drawn much of its inspiration from the European system of VAT.
The purpose of this article is to outline in simple terms how VAT across the GS is intended to operate and to indicate where difficult issues can arise in practice.
NOTE: This summary is based on the English translation of the Framework Agreement released on 3rd May 2017. If there is any difference between the English translation and the original Arabic version, the original Arabic version will prevail.
In overall concept, VAT is a relatively simple tax on consumption. Its essence is as follows:
If a customer receives any supply that it does not use for the purposes of making its own business supplies, that customer is not entitled to any deduction for the VAT paid to its supplier - it is the ultimate 'consumer' who effectively bears the economic cost of the VAT when it pays its supplier. No input tax deduction is therefore available for vat on such goods and services.
To take a simple example: B is a carpenter who makes and sells furniture; he buys some wood from A for SR10,000 and uses it to make a table that he then sells to C for SR12,000 for use in C's home. Applying VAT to this at a rate of 5%:
A would charge B SR10,000 plus VAT of SR500 for the wood and A would hand that SR500 (received from B) over to the tax authorities;
Applying terms used in the GCC VAT Agreement, A and B in this example are each a 'person subject to the tax' who make 'supplies subject to tax' which tax is 'output tax', and the SR500 of VAT that B pays A for the wood is from B's perspective 'input tax' that is 'deductible tax' from the SR600 output tax he has charged his customer.
However, having said at the start that the essence of VAT is relatively simple, unfortunately a number of details underpinning the way VAT should operate are rather more complex.
For GCC VAT purposes, supplies can be:
The importance of this distinction lies in the ability of a business customer to obtain a deduction for its input tax on the supplies made to it from the output tax it is required to pay to the tax authorities in respect of its own supplies to its customers. The general rule is that a business can deduct its input tax from its output tax when handing over the VAT to the tax authorities only to the extent that it has used the supplies it receives on which it has paid the input tax for the purposes of making supplies subject to tax (either at the 5% rate or the 0% rate). But it cannot deduct its input tax in this way to the extent that it has used the supplies on which it has paid the input tax for the purposes of making exempt supplies.
To illustrate by reference to the example above, if supplies of wood were subject to 5% VAT but supplies of tables were exempt from VAT, B would still pay SR10,000 plus VAT of SR500 to A for the wood, but B would not be able to charge VAT to C on top of the SR12,000 for the table, nor would B be able to deduct the SR500 of VAT paid to A (B's input tax) from anything. So B's profit would effectively be reduced from SR2,000 to SR1,500; to maintain his profit of SR2,000, B would need to charge C SR12,500 (exempt from VAT) for the table.
Apart from financial services, which are to be exempt from tax unless a GCC Member State decides to treat them differently, and imports of certain goods, which are to be exempted from tax, most supplies of goods and services will be subject to tax at the 5% rate unless, in relation to certain specified matters such as education, health, real estate etc, a GCC Member State chooses to zero rate them or exempt them.
The basic summary and example above are relatively straightforward in obvious cases in which the goods or services are clearly supplied and received entirely within one GCC Member State. But what about goods or services supplied between GCC Member States, or goods or services supplied into (or from) the GS from (or into) non-GS countries?
Intra-GS supplies of goods
The general rule is that an intra-GS supply of goods takes place where the goods are at the time they are put at the customer's disposal or, if the goods are supplied with transport, where the goods are when the transport begins. In general, this is likely to mean that the supplier will account for VAT in the supplier's GCC Member State.
There are exceptions to this general rule, for example:
Where the recipient of goods is subject to VAT in its GCC Member State and it acquires those goods from a resident of another GCC Member State, the person responsible for accounting for the VAT arising will be the recipient of the goods under what is referred to as the 'reverse charge mechanism'; this means that, broadly, the recipient of the supply accounts for VAT in its GCC Member State as if it had supplied the goods to itself and it can then claim a deduction for the input tax element of this self-supply from the output tax it has charged on supplies to its own customers.
Intra-GS supplies of services
The general rule is that intra-GS services are supplied:
There are however a number of special rules applying in specific cases, particularly where the services relate to transport, real estate, electronically supplied services, among others.
Imports of goods from outside the GS
Imports of services from outside the GS
Exports of goods to outside the GS
Exports of services to outside the GS
The time at which a supply is made or received is important for the purposes of correct record-keeping and payment of tax to the tax authorities (see further below).
Time of Supply of goods
In general, a supply of goods takes place on the earliest of the following dates:o when the goods are put at the disposal of the customer (if they are not being delivered);
Imports of goods take place at the date of first importation into the GS (but note the payment of tax provisions for imports of goods, below).
Time of supply of services
As regards a supply of services, it generally takes place on the earliest of the following dates:
In relation to a continuous supply of services, a supply will take place each time a payment is made or an invoice for payment is issued, whichever is the earlier, at least once in every twelve month period.
Any resident of a GCC Member State who is subject to the tax must register for GCC VAT purposes if the value if its supplies subject to tax is SR375,000 (or its equivalent) per year. If a supplier makes only supplies taxable at the zero rate it may ask for exemption from compulsory registration.
Voluntary registration
Any resident of a GCC Member State who makes supplies with a value of more than half of that VAT threshold of SR375,000 but less than SR375,000 may choose to register if it so wishes.
Payment of VAT
A person subject to the tax who is registered or liable to be registered for GCC VAT must account to the tax authorities for its net VAT in relation to periods to be specified by each GCC Member State, though any given period cannot be less than a month (using the Gregorian calendar). Tax returns will be required for each specified period containing information about supplies of all kinds (taxable at the rate of 5%, taxable at the rate of 0% and exempt) made and received in that period.
The general principle is that the person liable to pay the tax is the supplier, albeit the parties to a contract will likely often provide that the economic burden for that VAT falls onto the recipient of the supply. However, if the 'reverse charge mechanism' operates then the person liable to pay is the customer. In relation to imports the person liable to pay is the importer, though it may be entitled to suspend payment of VAT if a customs duty suspension scheme under the Common Customs law applies and it may be entitled to adjourn payment if it uses the goods imported for making its own business supplies.
The Framework Agreement contains more detail about the matters summarised above, as well as provisions dealing with other aspects such as deemed supplies, claims for repayment of VAT, exchange of information between GCC Member States, transitional provisions and objections and appeals. Regulations are expected to supplement all of the provisions in the Framework Agreement. We will examine these in detail in forthcoming articles.
Managing Partner, Middle East and Head of Middle East Dispute Resolution, Dubai
The contents of this publication are for reference purposes only and may not be current as at the date of accessing this publication. They do not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Specific legal advice about your specific circumstances should always be sought separately before taking any action based on this publication.
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