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DEVELOPMENT FINANCE ASSESSMENT FOR THE REPUBLIC OF UZBEKISTAN
include all revenue and spending from the many extra-budgetary funds and SOEs which
are yet to be consolidated into the budget, however. For example, the World Bank (2019)
estimated that consolidated government spending including the off-budget spending
amounted to 35.2 percent of GDP in 2018. Authorities introduced a “general fiscal balance”
indicator in their 2020 budget to fully account for the general government revenue.
Value-added taxes (VAT) are the largest component of Uzbekistan’s tax mix.
VAT and
excises represent close to 80 percent of indirect taxes. These taxes tend to be regressive
with a disproportionate impact on the poorest segments of the population and informal
businesses. Since January 1, 2019, Uzbekistan has switched to a flat scale of income tax.
An important drain on government’s fiscal space are Uzbekistan’s numerous tax incentives
and exemptions. Amounting to 6.4 percent of the GDP in 2018, they represented almost a
third of budgetary revenues (WB, 2019). As with the overall direction of policy and directed
credit, the largest share of tax incentives in Uzbekistan is for manufacturing (largely car
production), mining, and finance
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. Importantly, they were introduced without a cost-benefit
analysis and bypass the regular parliamentary process. Significant
measures aimed at
streamlining tax benefits and tax exemptions were taken in recent years. Further progress
would be required in establishing high-quality monitoring. To support the covid-19 recovery
there may be scope for considering temporary tax breaks for critical areas of activity.
The focus of the recent major tax reforms has been on reducing the tax burden for SMEs
and simplifying tax compliance. Fiscal policy measures included unifying the tax burden
on small and large enterprises, unifying the rates of corporate profit tax, personal income
tax, and the social tax to 12 percent, rationalizing the VAT payments, reducing the number
of direct
taxes and mandatory payments, and improving tax administration procedures.
Administrative improvements include the online tax platform, run by the State Committee
on Taxation, in combination with clear communication and taxpayer education through the
Citizens Budget initiative. These combined improvements underpinned the gradual increase
of the World Bank’s Paying Taxes score from 52.3 in 2015 to 69.9 in 2020.
While paying taxes
have become easier, they remain time-consuming (World Bank, 2019).
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