Taxing expats under spotlight
The new proposal was made by Muhammad Al-Quwaihes, member of the Shoura, who presented it as an additional recommendation attached to the annual report of the Department of Zakat and Income Tax, which had already been discussed by the Shoura.
The government is neither levying a single riyal in tax or Zakat on their remittance nor do they need to pay any kind of taxes,� he said.
Al-Quwaihes noted that most of the countries in the world impose income tax on individuals who work and earn money in those countries. �It is high time to impose income tax on foreigners. It is also to be noted that foreign workers are beneficiaries of all government support and subsidies given to utility services and products such as water, electricity, wheat, and petroleum products,� he said.
Both Saudi and expatriate employees working in the Kingdom had to pay income tax until it was abolished in 1975. Later, there were moves to reintroduce income tax on foreigners in late 80s. However, in 1988, King Fahd scrapped the plans.
At present, only Saudi citizens and Saudi companies need to pay Zakat of 2.5 percent annually on profits and on the assessable amount for individuals, in addition to a 45 percent tax on foreign investors.
In a bid to attract more foreign investment into the Kingdom, the government slashed, in 2004, the tax rate imposed on foreign investors from 45 to 20 percent.
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