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Stats indicate that Jamaicans are among the world leaders in average time spent on telephone calls and calls completed per capita... even with some of the highest rates worldwide.
JCS: Tax cellphone talk, not computers
Published: Friday | May 8, 2009
Silburn Clarke, deputy president of the Jamaica Computer Society. - File THE JAMAICA Computer Society (JCS) is lobbying government to roll back the general consump-tion tax on computers, saying similar revenues could be generated by increasing the cess instead on cellphone talkers.
The JCS is proposing that government charge five cents per minute for cellular airtime.
"If you put five cents on each minute of cellular airtime, they will recover the revenue they are seeking. It is a much easier tax to apply," said Silburn Clarke, the society's deputy president.
"They wont feel it at all," he said, referring to mobile subscribers.
Negative for long term
Clarke says the Government's decision to place a tax on computers would hurt the country in the long run.
"The role of computers in modern society is that it facilitates production, learning and the building of knowledge," he said.
Wrong direction
"When you begin to tax the very instrument that helps your development you are going in the wrong direction. "This slow down is persistently small and you will not look six years from now and see a difference, but years down the road you will wonder why Jamaica continues to slide in comparison to its Caribbean neighbours and one of the things you will be able to point to is the tax on computers which none of the other Caribbean countries are doing."
Still, there is no indication that the Government buys that argument.
Last week, when the objections began, Prime Minister Bruce Golding in his monthly radio programme suggested that individuals who desire to purchase computers for educational purposes should do so through the schools, which are exempt from GCT, but was adamant that large organisations such as banks
and business ventures such as exotic clubs will be taxed.
Clarke argued that the application of the tax affects every business
whether large or small, so the increase in the cost of a computer overall would affect any of the groups.
"If the PM intended to say banks have the capacity, that's a different thing ... but the tax is going to affect everybody."
Stats indicate that Jamaicans are among the world leaders in average time spent on telephone calls and calls completed per capita... even with some of the highest rates worldwide.
JCS: Tax cellphone talk, not computers
Published: Friday | May 8, 2009
Silburn Clarke, deputy president of the Jamaica Computer Society. - File THE JAMAICA Computer Society (JCS) is lobbying government to roll back the general consump-tion tax on computers, saying similar revenues could be generated by increasing the cess instead on cellphone talkers.
The JCS is proposing that government charge five cents per minute for cellular airtime.
"If you put five cents on each minute of cellular airtime, they will recover the revenue they are seeking. It is a much easier tax to apply," said Silburn Clarke, the society's deputy president.
"They wont feel it at all," he said, referring to mobile subscribers.
Negative for long term
Clarke says the Government's decision to place a tax on computers would hurt the country in the long run.
"The role of computers in modern society is that it facilitates production, learning and the building of knowledge," he said.
Wrong direction
"When you begin to tax the very instrument that helps your development you are going in the wrong direction. "This slow down is persistently small and you will not look six years from now and see a difference, but years down the road you will wonder why Jamaica continues to slide in comparison to its Caribbean neighbours and one of the things you will be able to point to is the tax on computers which none of the other Caribbean countries are doing."
Still, there is no indication that the Government buys that argument.
Last week, when the objections began, Prime Minister Bruce Golding in his monthly radio programme suggested that individuals who desire to purchase computers for educational purposes should do so through the schools, which are exempt from GCT, but was adamant that large organisations such as banks
and business ventures such as exotic clubs will be taxed.
Clarke argued that the application of the tax affects every business
whether large or small, so the increase in the cost of a computer overall would affect any of the groups.
"If the PM intended to say banks have the capacity, that's a different thing ... but the tax is going to affect everybody."
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