Apparantly in 2 years time VAT will be introduced in Dubai at rates of between 3-5%.....
http://www.gulfnews.com/business/Economy/10062264.html
UAE needs VAT with safeguards
By Robert Ditcham, Staff Reporter
Dubai: A system of value added tax (VAT) planned for the UAE must include tough safeguards against fraud, warn tax experts.
Criminals could attempt to replicate carousel fraud in the UAE when a VAT of 3 to 5 per cent is adopted in about 2 years, they say. This type of trade fraud is rife in the European Union.
As reported in Gulf News, carousel fraud cost the UK Government between £1.1 billion and £1.9 billion in lost tax revenue from 2004-05.
In its simplest form, the fraud occurs when goods are traded tax free between EU member nations. A trader sells them on to another company in an individual country with VAT included and then disappears without passing the 17.5 per cent VAT onto customs.
A more complex method happens when a company imports goods free of VAT, sells them onto a second company involved in the scam, which re-exports the goods, claims VAT from UK Revenue and Customs and imports them again.
"There is a danger that some similar type of fraud could be encouraged here," said Dr Khalid Maniar, managing partner at Dubai-based chartered accountants Agn Mak.
"The VAT system that is introduced must include a set of safeguards to minimise it."
Maniar suggested imposing tough restrictions on applications for VAT registration certificates, which allow companies to import goods and defer VAT payments until they are sold.
"The UK is a very open investor-friendly country, which seems to allow companies to apply for VAT registration without closely scrutinising their credentials," he said.
Maniar sought a limit on the value of goods that can be imported free of initial VAT payments, minimising the amount of money criminals can make from scams.
Officials at Dubai Customs refused to speculate on whether the introduction of VAT would encourage carousel rackets, but did not rule out the possibility.
"We are in contact with the UK Government to learn from their experience in this regard," said Abbas Makki, director of international relations at Dubai Customs.
"Through a combination of intelligence and risk management, we are confident we can limit any potential fraud."
Raju Menon, vice-chairman at Dubai-based Morison Menon Consulting, said carousel fraud was possible in the UAE but the chance of it happening on a similar scale to the UK was unlikely.
He said UK carousel fraud relies on companies going into liquidation in order to disappear, thereby avoiding VAT payments when goods are sold on.
According to Menon, UAE companies find it difficult to go into liquidation as bankruptcy laws are still in their infancy here, meaning the government will be able to hunt down criminals via payment receipts before they can vanish from official records.
"The chances of carousel fraud happening here are very slim, but loopholes can be exploited in every system," he said.