Attracting investments using tax incentives in Uganda: The effective tax
Abstract
Uganda operates a wide array of tax incentives schemes to attract investments like other countries in East Africa.
However, due to significant amount of revenue foregone due to such schemes, Uganda has embarked on the
process of rationalizing its overall incentive regime. This study examines the tax burden of various tax incentives
schemes operational in Uganda by estimating the effective marginal tax rates (EMTR) and effective average
tax rates (EATR). We find sectoral variations in effective average tax rates due to a selective tax holiday and
preferential income tax. Overall, tax holidays and preferential income tax rates lower the effective tax burden to a
single digit percent and encourage individual tax avoidance strategies. We find that the surge inflation registered
during 2010/11 had an adverse effect on effective tax rates. Furthermore, our results confirm in previous findings
that tax holidays effectively reduce EATR and favour high-profit short-lived (less than 5 years) investment projects
raising doubts about their overall rationale.