Your Say: Vat Is Not The Solution
By TIMOTHY ROBERTS
MY name is Tim. I am a 40-year-old graphic designer on the Island of Abaco and a citizen of the Commonwealth of the Bahamas.
I
 believe the Bahamas is indeed in need of tax reform; in fact we are 
likely more than overdue. Import duties have long been an inefficient 
model for the country due in large part to how easily and often they are
 circumvented and go unpaid.
However, the solution is not a Value Added Tax (VAT).
Based
 on the current information available, VAT will most certainly lead to a
 significant rise in the cost of living – something that is already 
relatively high – as it will lead to substantially higher cost of 
services.
These will in turn trickle down to the consumer.
The
 net result of increases in costs to consumers will lead to a 
contraction of the economy and ultimately a reduction of revenue to the 
Public Treasury.
The fallout of this will lead to businesses laying off persons to reduce expenditures as they hope to break even.
Before, however, we even have a conversation on raising taxes we must first reduce spending.
Any human being on earth, if they spend more money than they make, will find themselves in debt.
Anyone
 who seeks to borrow must ensure that they have the means on their own 
to pay such a loan back without bringing unnecessary hardship on 
themselves or their dependents. 
The
 government has not taken the known fiscally prudent path but insists in
 overspending (much of which is in fact wasteful spending) after which 
they unconscionably turn to the citizens to pay back by taxing them even
 more.
We must have a fiscally prudent government before they start adding more or higher taxes or a different tax.
In
 implementing the Central Revenue Agency (CRA) they will spend countless
 millions building, outfitting and employing yet more people in turn 
eating away at the potential revenue the government will collect from 
VAT. All the while still employing hundreds of Customs officers. 
The government must become more diligent – much more diligent – at collecting taxes.
The
 nation suffers when the necessary revenue is not collected and 
successive governments have chosen to borrow money instead of raise 
capital through the proper collection of taxes.
On
 the way to achieving fiscal prudence, it will be of great importance to
 implement a Freedom of Information Act and a Public Disclosures Act by 
which We The People can hold the government accountable.
We,
 as a nation, also must do our part. We must hold the government 
accountable while ourselves doing our reasonable part by paying our 
taxes, levies and fees. When we don’t do our part it hurts the entire 
country.
Today
 we are on the precipice of a perilous economic future and VAT is not 
the means to a more prosperous tomorrow for the Bahamas. We must all 
stand together and let the government – our government – know that VAT 
is not for us.
I believe together we are better. And together we can build a Better Bahamas.
December 12, 2013