A longitudinal analysis of tax planning schemes of firms in East Africa

Taxes play a significant role in the social and economic development of counties. On the other hand, taxes represent a significant cost to firms; hence they devise legal ways to reduce their taxes through tax planning. In East Africa, the statutory tax rate of firms averages 30%, which is considered...

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Main Authors: Alfred James Kimea, Msizi Mkhize
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: LLC "CPC "Business Perspectives" 2021-09-01
Series:Investment Management & Financial Innovations
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/15474/IMFI_2020_03_Kimea.pdf
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spelling doaj-5c16b52b157748d48bd070e5ae7a6d532021-09-06T10:20:56ZengLLC "CPC "Business Perspectives"Investment Management & Financial Innovations 1810-49671812-93582021-09-0118319420310.21511/imfi.18(3).2021.1815474A longitudinal analysis of tax planning schemes of firms in East AfricaAlfred James Kimea0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1501-1103Msizi Mkhize1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2910-794XPh.D. Candidate, College of Law and Management Studies, School of Accounting, Economics and Finance, University of KwaZulu NatalProfessor, College of Law and Management Studies, School of Accounting, Economics and Finance, University of KwaZulu NatalTaxes play a significant role in the social and economic development of counties. On the other hand, taxes represent a significant cost to firms; hence they devise legal ways to reduce their taxes through tax planning. In East Africa, the statutory tax rate of firms averages 30%, which is considered a major burden to the firms. As a result, this study aims to longitudinally examine the tax planning practices of listed firms in East Africa countries (EACs). The study used twelve-year annual reports of ninety-one firms from EACs. Both cash effective tax rate (CEFR) and accounting effective tax rate were employed as tax planning measures. Descriptive statistics together with Wilcoxon signed-ranked test were used to analyze the results. The study demonstrates the existence of corporate tax planning by the listed firms in EACs. The average CETR of the firms was 17% as opposed to the statutory tax rate of 30%, demonstrating that the firms actively engage in tax planning activities. The evidence further demonstrated a gradual decrease in the tax planning activities of the firms over the past twelve years. The study further found out that the rates of decline in the firms’ tax planning were statistically insignificant. Despite the decrease in the firms’ tax planning, the tax authorities in EACs should enforce tax laws to eliminate the tax planning problem.https://www.businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/15474/IMFI_2020_03_Kimea.pdfaccounting effective tax ratecash effective tax ratetax aggressivenesstax avoidancetax reforms
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alfred James Kimea
Msizi Mkhize
spellingShingle Alfred James Kimea
Msizi Mkhize
A longitudinal analysis of tax planning schemes of firms in East Africa
Investment Management & Financial Innovations
accounting effective tax rate
cash effective tax rate
tax aggressiveness
tax avoidance
tax reforms
author_facet Alfred James Kimea
Msizi Mkhize
author_sort Alfred James Kimea
title A longitudinal analysis of tax planning schemes of firms in East Africa
title_short A longitudinal analysis of tax planning schemes of firms in East Africa
title_full A longitudinal analysis of tax planning schemes of firms in East Africa
title_fullStr A longitudinal analysis of tax planning schemes of firms in East Africa
title_full_unstemmed A longitudinal analysis of tax planning schemes of firms in East Africa
title_sort longitudinal analysis of tax planning schemes of firms in east africa
publisher LLC "CPC "Business Perspectives"
series Investment Management & Financial Innovations
issn 1810-4967
1812-9358
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Taxes play a significant role in the social and economic development of counties. On the other hand, taxes represent a significant cost to firms; hence they devise legal ways to reduce their taxes through tax planning. In East Africa, the statutory tax rate of firms averages 30%, which is considered a major burden to the firms. As a result, this study aims to longitudinally examine the tax planning practices of listed firms in East Africa countries (EACs). The study used twelve-year annual reports of ninety-one firms from EACs. Both cash effective tax rate (CEFR) and accounting effective tax rate were employed as tax planning measures. Descriptive statistics together with Wilcoxon signed-ranked test were used to analyze the results. The study demonstrates the existence of corporate tax planning by the listed firms in EACs. The average CETR of the firms was 17% as opposed to the statutory tax rate of 30%, demonstrating that the firms actively engage in tax planning activities. The evidence further demonstrated a gradual decrease in the tax planning activities of the firms over the past twelve years. The study further found out that the rates of decline in the firms’ tax planning were statistically insignificant. Despite the decrease in the firms’ tax planning, the tax authorities in EACs should enforce tax laws to eliminate the tax planning problem.
topic accounting effective tax rate
cash effective tax rate
tax aggressiveness
tax avoidance
tax reforms
url https://www.businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/15474/IMFI_2020_03_Kimea.pdf
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