Transfer pricing refers to the process of setting the price for goods and services that are traded between related parties, such as subsidiaries within a multinational corporation which conduct business in other countries. The goal of transfer pricing is to ensure that the prices charged for these transactions are consistent with the prices that would be charged between unrelated parties in similar circumstances. There is a need to have some principle and rules on how transfer pricing should be done because if not regulated and monitored it can be used to manipulate a company’s financial results by shifting profits to subsidiaries in low-tax jurisdictions.
In considering the likely impacts which many arise out of the implementation of Transfer pricing, the Government of Tanzania has implemented transfer pricing regulations to prevent tax avoidance and ensure that companies pay the appropriate amount of taxes. Those laws are;
Apart from the above laws the Tanzania Revenue Authority has been publishing some guidelines on Transfer pricing which are also similar to the international guidelines on Transfer pricing as given out by the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) Transfer Pricing Guidelines and the United Nations (UN) Practical Manual on Transfer Pricing for Developing Countries.
This is a principle in economics and accounting that states that transactions between related parties (such as a parent company and its subsidiary) should be conducted as if they were between unrelated parties, in order to prevent conflicts of interest and ensure that each party acts in its own self-interest. This principle is often used to determine the appropriate transfer prices for goods and services between related parties, and is the basis for the international rules on transfer pricing established by the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). The principle is also an important concept in determining the tax liability of multinational corporations.
Tanzania through Tanzania Revenue Authority has adopted the Arm’s length principle to be used in all transaction related to transfer pricing. Regulation 4 of The Tax administration (Transfer pricing) Regulation of 2018 provides for the applicability of the principle in Tanzania with regards to the transfer pricing in Tanzania. There must be a comparison in prices, margins, division of profits or other indicators between controlled transactions and uncontrolled transactions.
In Tanzania the methods to be used in determining the arm’s length price for the controlled transactions are categorized the into two categories which are;
This are the methods which recommended to be used in the arm’s length pricing, and those methods are;
(a) The Comparable Uncontrolled Price (CUP method).
(b) The Resale Price Method (RP method).
(c) Cost Plus Method (CP method).
These methods are recommended be used only when traditional transactional methods cannot be reliably applied or exceptionally cannot be applied at all.
(a)Transactional Net Margin Method (TNMM method).
(b)The Profit Split Method.
The law has provided for the requirement of documentation to any person doing transfer pricing in Tanzania and those documents are to be filled with enough details provided that those details will be exhaustive enough to show that the transfer pricing process was done as required by the law, necessary details to be included in the documents are provided under Regulation 7(2) The Tax administration (Transfer pricing) Regulation of 2018. The transfer pricing documents are to be accompanied with the Income Tax returns at the end of the year.
The law further requires that;
The law provides for the penalties to the person who violate the legal requirements with regards to transfer pricing process.
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