posted on 2024-09-05, 20:40authored byMustapha Ndajiwo
African economies need adequate revenues for development, but weak tax laws, illicit financial flows and aggressive tax planning
have made it difficult for them to attain their full potential in raising revenue. Furthermore, the advent of digitalised business models, although with considerable potential to improve trade in Africa, has greatly exacerbated the two central challenges of
international tax. The first is the definition of taxable presence, and the second is the allocation of business profits of multinational
enterprises (MNEs) among the different jurisdictions where they operate. This has generated much debate and has seen the rise in unilateral measures in different jurisdictions. This paper is a case study of six African countries, namely Nigeria, Ghana, Senegal, Kenya, Rwanda, and Uganda. It examines the issue of nexus and profit allocation and the presence of digitalised
businesses in Africa and recommends immediate and long-term options available to African countries.
History
Publisher
Institute of Development Studies
Citation
Ndajiwo, M. (2020) The Taxation of the Digitalised Economy: An African Study, ICTD Research in Brief 60, Brighton, IDS