Safaricom to exempt tax on data costing less than Sh100
Business
By
Valentine Kondo
| Oct 20, 2018
Safaricom will have to exempt taxing data costing less than Sh100 from 15 percent excise duty on internet charges and telephone in line with the Finance Act 2018.
The giant telco had on August lowered rates on data for consumers to enjoy affordable internet services through their mobile phones and internet enabled devices.
Chalres Kare, Safaricoms director of Consumer Business on Friday held that they had made the move effective Thursday.
“This was informed by a need to ensure affordability and access to all and that no one is left behind in the push to digital transformation of our country,” he asserted.
READ MORE
Kenya advances crypto regulation through VASP roundtable
Inside William Ruto's emergency talks to avert fuel crisis
Kenya Airways defends record Sh17b loss
As Kenya braces for Iran war fallout, CBK forex reserves hit Sh1.82t
Standard Chartered targets key sectors in new financing push
Iran-US war costs Kenyan flower exporters Sh623 million
Tea factory bosses warn new law for sector to hurt farmers
Farmers turn banana stems waste into wealth
AMAC signs deal with Uganda's Grain Council to open regional markets
Konza, Microsoft bank on AI skills to accelerate women in creative economy
The firm will however charge data costing above Sh100 on voice and SMS services in line with the recent increase in Excise Duty tax on voice and messaging services from 10 percent to 15 percent which is part of the 16 percent value added tax (VAT).
Kare however expressed optimism on the likelihood of future decrease in the charges when negotiation with key stakeholders is over.
Safaricom lost more than Sh70 billion when the controversial Finance Bill was passed on September 20 that saw its shares drop to a 10-month low.
On Thursday, Safaricom increased the cost of voice and data, and SMS by 30 cents and 10 cents respectively.
The company has reviewed the cost of mobile data bundles on internet services of Fibre-To-The-Building (FTTB) and Fibre-To-The-Home (FTTH) in line with 15 percent Excise Duty tax.
The move comes when Cyton report has placed Safaricom as one of the best three companies in corporate governance with Kenya Commercial Bank and Nairobi Securities Exchange.