dc.description.abstract | Kenya's is an economy that has not realised its full potential in terms of vibrancy and
competition. Many an economy the size of Kenya's are producing many times what the
Kenyan economy is in terms of revenue. Economic analysts agree that what may be
lacking is investment in the country's economy, and that the economy still has the
capability to handle quite a number of investments.
Persons who look to invest in any country, whether they are locals or foreigners, take a
few matters into consideration, matters that will either jeopardise or promote their
realising a return on their investment. One of the matters that an investor takes into
consideration is the proportion of his realised income that he has to surrender to the
Government of the day in form of tax. Tax matters affect the amount of return that an
investor will eventually take home with him, and it is therefore important to an investor
that he is certain, well before placing the investment, of tax matters that he will face.
First, this work reviews the theory behind taxation, tax planning, national and
international tax, and the canon of certainty in taxation, while considering the factors that
an investor ordinarily has in mind when making a decision whether or not to invest in a
given country or state. Second, the dissertation reviews the provisions of the income tax
legislation in Kenya, with an emphasis on taxation of remittances that are ordinarily paid
out by subsidiaries of Multi-national Corporations to their mother companies.
The study concludes by conducting a comparative survey of the taxation of remittances in
other countries of the world, while considering the steps these have made towards
bringing some certainty to the abstract arm's length principle in transactions between
related companies, and finally recommending a framework that Kenya may adopt in
developing its own certainty in the same regard.
It is expected that, with certainty in taxation matters of a given country, investors are
more confident and attracted to invest in such country. This is what we hope for Kenya. | en |