business@tribunemedia.net
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 22, 2023
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Hitting Govât deficit target âincreasingly complicatedâ By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net THE Government will find it âincreasingly complicatedâ to hit this yearâs 75 percent deficit-slash target, a major global bank has warned, while predicting this will âshift the debate back to tax reformâ. Santander, in a November 28, 2023, update for institutional investors on The Bahamasâ fiscal status, hailed the âimportant progressâ made by the Davis administration in achieving a 2022-2023 fiscal deficit that came in below the original $564m target to give this nation some ânear-term breathing roomâ. However, its note warned that âthe good news now might be behind usâ with the Bahamian and world economyâs post-COVID reflation largely complete and this nationâs Budget lacking sufficient flexibility to make expenditure adjustments following the end to pandemic spending on subsidies and other relief. Pointing out that debt servicing costs have increased significantly postCOVID, due to the debt blow-out that it and Hurricane Dorian produced, to now stand at 4.2 percent of gross
* Santander: âNo clear planâ for $390m slash * But hails Govât on ânear-term breathing roomâ * Says unlikely to go for ânecessary tax reformâ domestic product (GDP) as opposed to 2.6 percent pre-pandemic, Santander asserted that âno clear planâ has been articulated as to how The Bahamas will achieve the magnitude of the correction it is targeting. Openly stating that âthe next phase for fiscal consolidation is much more challengingâ, its report said: âThe fiscal targets are now increasingly complicated on shifting a nominal -4 percent of GDP deficit to near balance this fiscal year and, still more important, consolidation to a 1.5-2 percent of GDP nominal surplus in fiscal years 2024-2025 and 2025-2026.â That amounts to a $389.5m correction, or reduction. While agreeing that the Governmentâs âmore ambitious trajectoryâ would be more beneficial to The Bahamas, in terms of easing the high interest and financing burden on Bahamian taxpayers, Santander reiterated it was ânot clearâ how the 2023-2024 targets will be realised given the absence of tax/revenue
reform and âbudget rigidityâ given that most spending covers fixed costs such as salaries and rents. âThe more ambitious trajectory on fiscal consolidation would provide some welcome relief not only on the high plus-80 percent of GDP debt ratios but also the high 22 percent of gross financing needs and the high interest at 23 percent of government revenues in 2022-2023,â it added. âThe first preview to 2023-2024 shows the seasonal shift back to surplus in July 2023 but a lower surplus compared to July 2022 ($18.2m versus $41.3m). Itâs not clear how the gradual consolidation will shift a 4 percent of GDP deficit to near nominal balance in fiscal year 2023-2024 at -0.9 percent of GDP. âThe official fiscal year 2023-2024 projection includes equal adjustment for a 1.7 percent of GDP increase in revenues and a 1.7 percent of GDP cutback in spending. There was no improvement on revenues/GDP this SEE PAGE B04
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URCAâS BPL FUEL TARIFF REVIEW âSOUNDS BIT ODDâ * Regulator to evaluate charges it already approved * Opposition chief asserts: âThey are doing this lateâ By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net THE Oppositionâs leader yesterday asserted âit sounds a bid oddâ that regulators now plan to examine the lawfulness of Bahamas Power & Lightâs (BPL) fuel charges having previously approved them. Michael Pintard said the Utilities Regulation and Competition Authority (URCA), based on its 2024 annual plan, is preparing to âauditâ the very same BPL fuel charge âglide pathâ strategy that it approved in late 2022 and which subsequently resulted in âsky rocketingâ electricity bills for Bahamian households and businesses. âMy first reaction, if my recollection is correct, URCA approved
OPPOSITION leader Michael Pintard. the rate increases for BPL. If Iâm correct, the approved the âglide pathâ,â the Free National Movement (FNM) leader told this newspaper. âIt sounds a bit odd to me that they are now going to review the very thing theyâve approved.... They are doing this late. This ought to have been done prior to them giving BPL approval to proceed. âI would like to see what the data says, but we are of the view that they justified SEE PAGE B04
SMALL BUSINESS ACT: PROVE SERVICES EXPORTS DESERVE VAT-FREE RATING âLETâS CLOSE THE DEALâ By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net A SMALL business advocate is pledging to âclose the dealâ on legislation to advance the sectorâs interests in 2024, adding: âThis is my last year in pushing for this Act.â Mark A Turnquest, the 242 Small Business Association and Resource Centreâs (SBARC) founder, told Tribune Business that his personal 14-year quest for a Bahamas Micro, Small and Medium Size Development Act (MSME Act) will be handed over to the organisationâs ânew management teamâ to pursue if it does not happen next year. âThis is it. This is my last year in pushing for this Act,â he said. âItâs been too long now; time for them [SBARCâs management] to take it over. This is it. This is my last year. I tell you now this is it. Weâre going to close on this this year and
MARK A Turnquest bring everybody on board. âWe now have to close the deal. I will never go away from advocacy, but I will not be doing it all myself. I first developed the framework 14 years ago, and this has to be where I reach the end of my journey. I gave it all for small businesses in this country. My whole life, since God gave me strength in my eyesight, has been to focus on the Small Business SEE PAGE B08
DONâT LEAVE FISCAL CHANGE UNTIL âTHINGS GETTING DICEYâ By NEIL HARTNELL Tribune Business Editor nhartnell@tribunemedia.net THE Bahamas must not leave the need for any fiscal adjustments to the stage where âthings get a bit diceyâ, a governance reformer advocated yesterday in backing the IDB. Hubert Edwards, head of the Organisation for Responsible Governanceâs (ORG) economic development committee, told Tribune Business that the Inter-American Development Bankâs (IDB) call for the Government to make any necessary Budget and medium-term Fiscal Strategy alterations in response to changing conditions and circumstances was âsoundâ. With the Davis administration forecasting a 75 percent or $389m yearover-year decline in the 2023-2024 fiscal deficit, as part of its strategy for producing a Budget surplus the following fiscal year, he agreed that it should not unduly delay any changes
that become necessary but added that moving in the âgeneralâ direction of the consolidation path laid out will be sufficient. âAnything that threatens that on a fundamental level, where it is recognised there is going to be a shortfall in revenue or over-spending and a need for additional spending, the Government must make early adjustments,â Mr Edwards told this newspaper. âDespite maybe not making the 0.9 percent of GDP deficit target, which is what the IMF has promulgated, I think the general trend of moving the deficit downwards vis a vis two to three years ago and making progress towards a surplus is very important at this time. âItâs not necessary in the grand scheme of things that we need a balanced Budget at this time, but having regard to the creditworthiness of the country and the debt circumstances and the SEE PAGE B07
BAHAMIAN accountants must prove audit and other services they provide to financial services entities are âfor purposes outsideâ the jurisdiction to obtain VAT-free treatment, the tax authorities have ruled. The Department of Inland Revenueâs acting VAT comptroller, in an âadvance rulingâ dated October 31 this year, responding to a request for clarification from an unnamed accounting said the VAT treatment
depends on whether âthe benefit or advantageâ from receiving their services occurs outside or within The Bahamas. Should accounting services be supplied for âpurposes outside The Bahamas, the tax authority warned that firms must obtain records from their client to prove this and make them available for inspection to obtain a VAT-free or âzero ratingâ designation. This will enable their client to avoid the standard 10 percent levy. Pretino P. Albury, the Bahamas Institute of
Chartered Accountants (BICA) president, could not be reached for comment before press time last night but sources told Tribune Business that the ruling and its implications have prompted discussions in accounting circles. At least one source, speaking on condition of anonymity, questioned whether applying VAT on services charged to Bahamas-domiciled corporate vehicles - such as International Business Companies (IBCs), trusts and investment funds - typically used by international clients was the right way to
boost financial services competitiveness. Another suggested the supply of such services had been VAT âzero ratedâ until the law was changed to address the âring fencingâ concerns of the European Union (EU) and Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD). One accountant said some were discussing whether to absorb the VAT rather than pass it on to their clients. Referring to the accounting firmâs request, the acting VAT comptroller SEE PAGE B06