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U.A.E. Excise Tax Starts in October in Drive to Boost Revenue

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  • U.A.E. Excise Tax Starts in October in Drive to Boost Revenue

The United Arab Emirates will start imposing a tax on selected goods starting Oct. 1 as Gulf Arab nations seek to deepen government revenue to counter the drop in oil prices.

A levy on designated goods — tobacco, energy drinks and soft drinks — will include those sold at airports and free zones, Younis Al Khoori, undersecretary at Ministry of Finance, told the state-run WAM news agency. Products purchased at airports by travelers taking the goods abroad will be exempt, he said.

The move is one of the measures taken by the six-member Gulf Cooperation Council work to bolster non-oil revenue and is a milestone for a region that has attracted companies and workers largely through the promise of tax-free living. The bloc is also moving to implement value-added taxation though governments say they have no plans to introduce income tax.

Saudi Arabia, grappling with a double-digit budget deficit, has already implemented an excise tax this year. The International Monetary Fund in October said the Gulf monarchies have “considerable scope” to boost tax income from other industries and advised them to gradually “introduce or expand the tax on business profits.”

The levy is estimated to generate around 7 billion dirhams ($1.9 billion) in annual revenue for the U.A.E. government, according to WAM. Energy drinks and tobacco products will be subjected to a 100 percent tax, while the levy on soft drinks will be 50 percent, Al Khoori said.

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