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Protests: City traders insist on strike as Minister tells them to go grow pineapples

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Minister insists traders should not put Museveni under pressure but rather go and grow pineapples

Kampala City traders and various umbrella bodies of Kampala City Traders Association (KACITA), Uganda Cargo Consolidators, and Kampala Rice Traders have insisted on closing their shops until they meet President Yoweri Museveni.

Yesterday, city traders embarked on closing their shops protesting exorbitant tax regimes in the country. According to Isa Ssekitto, the Spokesperson for Kasita, the closure is aimed at seeing President Museveni address their challenges, including the implementation of the Electronic Fiscal Receipting and Invoicing Solution (EFRIS).

Their strike followed the calling off of their planned meeting with President Museveni. The meeting was scheduled to happen on Tuesday after the flopping of the June 30 meeting.

The meeting aimed at assessing the processes implementing EFRIS. City traders decried over taxations and penalties arising from failure to remit VAT and the Chinese invasion of the local markets.

The business community protested the system, closing shops in Kikuubo and downtown, claiming double taxation and lack of information about the system. They stated that the system is costly in terms of implementation since it requires devices like computers or smartphones and a gadget for printing receipts.

They contend that high import values (old ones) are making it hard for traders to clear their goods and that the high cost of living means that most of the essential goods are becoming unaffordable to the common man.

Earlier today, Edward Ntale, the chairperson of the United Arcades Entrepreneurs Association (UATEA), condemned the dismissive stance by Minister of State for Kampala and Metropolitan Affairs, Kabuye Kyofatogabye, towards their grievances.

Minister tells traders to go grow pineapples

Kyofatogabye claimed that if city traders feel uncomfortable working or paying taxes, they should resort back to their villages and grow pineapples. Ntale vowed not to bow down to police pressure to reopen their shops.

URA started implementing EFRIS in 2021 to address tax administration challenges relating to business transactions and the issuance of receipts. The system helps URA assess the right taxes using accurate and authentically generated information. It also enables businesses to thrive with improved record-keeping and monitored stock and sales, among others.

The implementation of EFRIS will ensure not just equity in tax collection, especially VAT, but also transparency. The system is expected to double total VAT collections from Shs3.5 trillion to about Shs7 trillion.

Tanzania and Rwanda adopted EFRIS over 10 years ago. These countries collect 33% and 30%, respectively, of their total tax revenue through VAT. Uganda is currently collecting about 15% VAT of its total tax revenue, and this amounts to Shs3.5 trillion.

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