Thursday, May 9, 2019
By NEIL HARTNELL
Tribune Business Editor
nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
The government is targeting a minimum $21m in extra annual revenue through a “world class” real property tax system that captures every home and commercial building on New Providence.
Marlon Johnson, the Ministry of Finance’s acting financial secretary, told Tribune Business that door-to-door calls will be made on all New Providence properties over the next 18 months in a bid to create a modernised tax system that delivers improved revenue yields together with greater taxpayer equity and fairness.
Confirming the government’s belief that this exercise will increase the number of properties on the tax roll by 30 percent, Mr Johnson said it would ultimately develop an “objective basis” for valuing real estate that would enable owners to challenge billings and tax assessments they believe are over-valued.
Revealing that its estimates were “not plucked from the sky”, he disclosed that the $21m extra annual revenue target was a “base case scenario” with the Ministry of Finance believing the actual yield could be “substantially higher” and more than justify the project’s $7.2m cost.
While declining to reveal the Government’s most optimistic forecast, Mr Johnson added that the Government planned to check the valuations and other data it obtained with recent appraisals and sales conducted in the same area by professional realtors to ensure its numbers were “realistic” and “on track”.
His comments came as the Government warned all New Providence home and business owners to brace for a visit from “data collectors” during the 18 months between June 2019 and year-end 2020 as part of its latest tax crackdown.
While owners do not have to give these “collectors” access to the interior of their property, they will be taking photographs of all properties and measuring their exterior dimensions. They will also determine the current property owner’s identity, and seek information including the year the building was built; occupancy type and size of building; number of rooms and type of construction.
“We want to capture every single residence and commercial property on the island,” Mr Johnson told Tribune Business. “It’s going to be a very intense effort, but all the data we capture - the photos, the measurements - will be digitised so that we have an up-to-date, current and world-class appraisal of properties on New Providence. Going forward, we will just have to update it.”
The initiative, which will see the Government hire 40 Bahamians to act as “data collectors” on behalf of the Department of Inland Revenue (DIR) and its consultant, Tyler Technologies, aims to modernise and update a property tax roll and land register it described as “woefully outdated”.
Mr Johnson acknowledged that the Government was required by law to conduct revaluations and assessments for real property tax purposes at regular intervals, but this had not been carried out for quite some time.
As a result, real property tax bills often fail to reflect a property’s true value, resulting in both under and over-payment of tax. New constructions, and building improvements, especially in gated communities are often completely missed or not captured in the valuations used to determine tax assessments.
Besides an inadequate system facilitating tax evasion and avoidance through poor administration, the lack of consistent valuations - and a defined appraisal methodology - leaves taxpayers unable to challenge billings with like-properties often assessed for two different sums.
Branding the real property tax modernisation initiative as “absolutely critical”, Mr Johnson said: “We believe there are a substantial number of properties not on the roll.
“It’s critical to our revenue enhancement objectives, and just as important is to create an objective basis on which to assess properties. There’ll be an objective basis on which taxpayers can appeal any decision or assessment method.
‘If you wish to challenge it, you will understand the criteria on which it is based. This is something that will benefit the taxpayer as well as it will determine an objective criteria to validate assessments.”
Mr Johnson described the targeted $21m increase in annual real property tax revenues as “our base case scenario”. He added: “I don’t want to tell you the number on the upper end. We believe that’s a very reasonable assessment, and the yields could be even greater than that.
“The fact a full assessment has not been done for a long time, and property values will have gone up, we believe the yields could be substantial. It’s not a number plucked from the sky; it’s based on the results of the initial pilot done in 2016 and models we’ve done. We feel $21m annually is very much attainable.”
Some estimates place real property tax compliance rates as low as 30-40 percent, with owners taking advantage of numerous system loopholes, poor administration and record-keeping and a culture of poor to non-existent enforcement to evade tax liabilities due to the Government.
The latter’s recent nine-month fiscal “snapshot” showed that real property tax revenues for the period June 2018 to end-March 2019 stood at $93.7m, a slight $4.7m improvement on the sum collected in the prior year, and amounting to 70.9 percent of the full-year $132.2m projection.
Mr Johnson, meanwhile, said the data collected during the 18-month exercise will be cross-checked with appraisals and sales prices involving Bahamian realtors to ensure they are in line with market values.
“Part of the side work as this data comes in is to test it against property sales in the same areas,” he revealed. “It’s not an academic exercise or exercise purely driven by some abstract sense of what property values are.
“It will be driven by the real time value of properties. As information comes in, the team will consult with the community of realtors and appraisers so we’re on track to confirm the market value of properties.”
The Government, in its statement yesterday, said the initiative was designed to improve tax yields and efficiency while also helping with the drive to digitise all government services. Once New Providence is completed, the exercise will be rolled out to the Family Islands.
K P Turnquest, deputy prime minister, said: “This exercise is long overdue to help address known challenges with the real property tax system and general inefficiencies in the Government’s tax administration.
“It will help to reduce further revenue leakage caused by dated, incomplete and inaccurate data currently stored in the system, and allow for fair and timely assessments, using quantifiable and objective criteria.”
He added: “It is in line with the Prime Minister’s mandate on modernisation and digitisation, for which Department of Inland Revenue (DIR has been fully committed.
“As the Government’s largest tax collection agency, DIR continues to drive the reform process forward. The data collection exercise commencing in June is only one part of a larger project, but it will set an important foundation for the entire real property tax modernisation.”
The Government said it plans to give the public online access to a database of property values using information collected from this exercise. The project will establish a fully integrated and digital process for the DIR to keep property values up-to-date, and create an open, transparent and objective basis for tax assessments to be made, queried and challenged.
“We are working hard to bring more accurate and objective data into the real property tax valuation system; this data collection exercise is the foundation. At the end of the project, we will finally be able to establish rate parity across the country, which means two neighbours will no longer have dramatically different rates on what seems like an arbitrary basis,” said Gaynell Rolle, acting comptroller of Inland Revenue.
“We are asking the general public to support the Department of Inland Revenue and its data collectors as we go into the field to meet with property owners and collect vital information that is mandated by the Real Property Tax Act. This is an important project to bring more integrity and fairness into the system; we are counting on the public to support our workers in the field.”
Comments
John says...
The government may discover that much of that $500 Million they are claiming in outstanding property taxes do not exist. For one there are many properties in the inner city that have been uninhabitable for many years. Yet they are being assessed property taxes. Some buildings have been completely demolished and became vacant property and that property is still being taxed. And some properties have been sold for many years, but the original owner and the new owner are being billed for property tax. Property tax has to be paid for the new owner to get clear title, but the DIR comes to them years after the fact and says the taxes are still owing. And many Bahamians still question why after having to pay the government 35% import duties on everything that goes into constructing a building plus 12% VAT, they must still pay property taxes. Unlike the United States where they only pay 7% sales taxes on properties then a property tax is more justified. And still government charges an additional 5% interest on late payments. Most banks are paying 0 to 1/2% interest on bank deposits.
Posted 9 May 2019, 3:21 p.m. Suggest removal
Gotoutintime says...
Wish you the best of luck on this---I have my
doubts!
Posted 9 May 2019, 4:58 p.m. Suggest removal
Well_mudda_take_sic says...
> The initiative, which will see the Government hire 40 Bahamians to act as “data collectors” on behalf of the Department of Inland Revenue (DIR) and its consultant, Tyler Technologies, aims to modernise and update a property tax roll and land register it described as “woefully outdated”.
Why do 40 Bahamians have to be hired when we have a civil workforce with thousands and thousands of them sitting around all day doing nothing? And who's the Bahamian muck-a-muck behind Tyler Technologies?
Posted 9 May 2019, 5:35 p.m. Suggest removal
bcitizen says...
Exactly!
Posted 9 May 2019, 9:15 p.m. Suggest removal
TheMadHatter says...
Poor Bahamians. No end to taxation in sight. Rest easy though, you can sleep soundly knowing that all of your tax dollars are safely held in the "Consolidated Fund" - LOL.
Posted 10 May 2019, 12:14 a.m. Suggest removal
realitycheck242 says...
I hope homes valued under $100,000 in inner cities areas and homes built in those areas that are over 30 years old are are exempted from this new tax. God knows the poor cant take no more tax .
Posted 10 May 2019, 6 a.m. Suggest removal
BONEFISH says...
Mr.Hartnell,you need to ask questions about Tyler Technologies.The company was abruptly terminated by the duo of Johnson and Turnquest.Then they realize they need the company to complete the modernization of the real property unit.Let Mr.Johnson tell you what the cost to complete the project was.The cost pales to their cost now.This is the same thing that happen to the REU unit,they meet in place.This is why this country is the way it is,because of dumb,stupid decisions made by people in authority.
Posted 10 May 2019, 6:42 p.m. Suggest removal
Granma says...
What is this? I know that the country needs money but be careful what
ya'll doing to God's people. Many government homes and homes under a certain value were exempt from real property taxes. This government is just doggone greedy and they put the right person there to do the job a man who does not fear GOD.....but he will one day.
Posted 13 May 2019, 2:33 p.m. Suggest removal
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