Kenya Treasury Targets Sh177 Billion from Tax Evaders Amid Finance Bill Adjustments
The Kenyan National Treasury is intensifying its crackdown on tax evasion, aiming to recover Sh177 billion to bolster government revenue following the withdrawal of the controversial Finance Bill 2024. This strategic shift comes as the government grapples with a significant budget shortfall, prompting a focus on enforcing compliance rather than imposing new taxes, which had sparked widespread protests earlier this year.
The Finance Bill 2024, initially designed to raise over Sh346 billion through new and enhanced tax measures, was met with fierce opposition from citizens, particularly the youth-led Gen Z movement. Protests in June 2024, which culminated in demonstrators storming Parliament, forced President William Ruto to withdraw the bill. The decision left the Treasury facing a Sh346 billion revenue gap, necessitating alternative strategies to finance the Sh3.992 trillion budget for the 2024/25 fiscal year. To address this, the government announced Sh177 billion in budget cuts and plans to borrow an additional Sh169 billion, alongside efforts to recover revenue from tax cheats.
The Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) is spearheading the crackdown on tax evasion, deploying advanced strategies to identify and penalize non-compliant taxpayers. The Treasury’s focus on tax cheats is part of a broader effort to expand the tax base and improve revenue collection without introducing unpopular tax hikes. Key initiatives include:
- Integration with Financial Systems: The KRA has begun integrating its systems with banks, mobile money platforms like M-Pesa, and other payment service providers to track transactions in real time. This move aims to uncover unreported income and ensure compliance, particularly among high-net-worth individuals (HNWIs) and businesses.
- Lifestyle Audits and Investigations: The KRA has deployed hundreds of investigators to conduct background checks and lifestyle audits targeting wealthy tax evaders. Recent efforts uncovered Sh79 billion in unpaid taxes, with 461 tycoons identified as using sophisticated methods, such as offshore tax havens and complex corporate structures, to hide wealth.
- Collaboration with International Bodies: Kenya’s ratification of the Multilateral Convention for Mutual Administrative Assistance in Tax Matters (MAC) in 2020 enables the KRA to work with other jurisdictions to audit HNWIs and multinational corporations, further tightening the net around tax evaders.
These measures reflect the government’s determination to meet its revenue target of Sh2.917 trillion for the current fiscal year, up from Sh2.452 trillion in 2023/24, despite the absence of new tax legislation.
The withdrawal of the Finance Bill 2024 was a response to public outcry over proposed taxes, including a 16% VAT on bread and a 2.5% motor vehicle tax. The National Assembly’s Finance and Planning Committee, chaired by Molo MP Kuria Kimani, proposed alternative revenue-raising measures, such as increasing the Import Declaration Fee to 3.5% and raising the Railway Development Levy to fund infrastructure projects like Nairobi’s electric light rail system. These adjustments aim to minimize the fiscal deficit while avoiding measures that could reignite public unrest.
The Treasury is also under pressure from international lenders like the International Monetary Fund (IMF), which has urged Kenya to reduce its fiscal deficit from Sh768.6 billion (4.3% of GDP) to Sh759.4 billion (3.8% of GDP) in the upcoming fiscal year. However, the failure to pass the Finance Bill has increased liquidity risks, with Moody’s warning that higher borrowing needs could elevate debt costs. Domestic investors have already signaled caution, offering only Sh486.5 million in a recent tap sale of a two-year bond against a target of Sh20 billion, anticipating higher interest rates due to increased borrowing.
Challenges and Economic Implications
The Treasury’s reliance on tax enforcement and borrowing to plug the revenue gap presents several challenges:
1. Public Trust: Aggressive tax enforcement, particularly targeting small businesses and the informal sector, risks alienating taxpayers if perceived as heavy-handed. The KRA’s attempt to access bank data without court orders was rejected by the Finance Committee as unconstitutional, highlighting tensions between revenue collection and privacy rights.
2. Economic Strain: Increased borrowing, both domestically and externally, could drive up interest rates and debt servicing costs, further straining Kenya’s economy. The government’s original budget deficit of Sh597 billion was to be financed through Sh263.2 billion in domestic borrowing and Sh333.8 billion externally, but the additional Sh169 billion required due to the Finance Bill’s withdrawal will likely exacerbate fiscal pressures.
3. Revenue Shortfalls: The KRA has historically struggled to meet ambitious revenue targets, relying on random audits that often fail to capture sophisticated evasion schemes. The success of the current crackdown will depend on the agency’s ability to leverage technology and international cooperation effectively.