Billions trimmed from corporate tax bills through credits
CORPORATE income tax credits are offsetting a significant share of company tax liabilities in Jamaica, with “other credits” accounting for close to one-fifth of reported net corporate income tax in recent years, according to the Government’s latest tax expenditure statement.
The figures show that billions of dollars in corporate tax are reduced each year through structured credits embedded in the tax system.
Companies reported net corporate income tax of about $72.2 billion in 2022, rising to roughly $77.8 billion in 2023 and $81.1 billion in 2024. Over that period, “other credits” accounted for billions annually and represented nearly 19 per cent of reported net tax in some years.
The credits arise under several policy mechanisms, including investment-linked incentives and the Employment Tax Credit programme, which allows qualifying firms to reduce their effective corporate income tax rate on trading profits. Additional relief is tied to urban renewal initiatives and other targeted sector programmes.
Unlike discretionary ministerial waivers — which are now capped at $210 million annually following earlier fiscal reforms — corporate tax credits operate through structured, rule-based provisions written into law.
The data come as the Government seeks to strengthen revenue performance following Hurricane Melissa, in addition to mounting reconstruction and climate resilience costs. Recent revenue measures, including adjustments to consumption taxes, underscore the Administration’s effort to bolster collections.
While the tax expenditure report cautions that eliminating incentives would not automatically produce equivalent revenue gains because taxpayer behaviour may change, the scale of the credits highlights the fiscal trade-off embedded in the corporate tax system.
— Dashan Hendricks