Time to prepare and pay taxes (hours) - Country Ranking - Africa

Definition: Time to prepare and pay taxes is the time, in hours per year, it takes to prepare, file, and pay (or withhold) three major types of taxes: the corporate income tax, the value added or sales tax, and labor taxes, including payroll taxes and social security contributions.

Source: World Bank, Doing Business project (http://www.doingbusiness.org/).

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Libya 889.00 2019
2 Chad 834.00 2019
3 Gabon 632.00 2019
4 Cameroon 624.00 2019
5 Congo 602.00 2019
6 Equatorial Guinea 492.00 2019
7 Central African Republic 483.00 2019
8 São Tomé and Principe 424.00 2019
9 Senegal 416.00 2019
10 Guinea 400.00 2019
11 Egypt 370.00 2019
12 Dem. Rep. Congo 346.00 2019
13 Nigeria 343.37 2019
14 Sierra Leone 343.00 2019
15 Lesotho 327.00 2019
16 The Gambia 326.00 2019
17 Namibia 302.00 2019
18 Ethiopia 300.00 2019
19 Angola 287.00 2019
20 Mali 276.00 2019
21 Mauritania 270.00 2019
21 Niger 270.00 2019
21 Benin 270.00 2019
21 Burkina Faso 270.00 2019
25 Algeria 265.00 2019
26 Zimbabwe 242.00 2019
27 Burundi 232.00 2019
28 Ghana 226.00 2019
29 Guinea-Bissau 218.00 2019
30 Eritrea 216.00 2019
31 South Africa 210.00 2019
32 Tanzania 207.00 2019
33 Mozambique 200.00 2019
34 Uganda 195.00 2019
35 Côte d'Ivoire 187.00 2019
36 Madagascar 183.00 2019
37 Cabo Verde 180.00 2019
37 Sudan 180.00 2019
39 Kenya 179.50 2019
40 Malawi 169.00 2019
41 Togo 159.00 2019
42 Zambia 158.00 2019
43 Morocco 155.00 2019
44 Tunisia 144.00 2019
45 Mauritius 140.00 2019
46 Liberia 139.50 2019
47 Eswatini 122.00 2019
48 Botswana 120.00 2019
49 Comoros 100.00 2019
50 Rwanda 90.50 2019
51 Seychelles 85.00 2019
52 Djibouti 76.00 2019

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Development Relevance: The total tax rate payable by businesses provides a comprehensive measure of the cost of all the taxes a business bears. It differs from the statutory tax rate, which is the factor applied to the tax base. In computing business tax rates, actual tax payable is divided by commercial profit. Taxes are the main source of revenue for most governments. The sources of tax revenue and their relative contributions are determined by government policy choices about where and how to impose taxes and by changes in the structure of the economy. Tax policy may reflect concerns about distributional effects, economic efficiency (including corrections for externalities), and the practical problems of administering a tax system. There is no ideal level of taxation. But taxes influence incentives and thus the behavior of economic actors and the economy's competitiveness.

Limitations and Exceptions: To make the data comparable across countries, several assumptions are made about businesses. The main assumptions are that they are limited liability companies, they operate in the country's most populous city, they are domestically owned, they perform general industrial or commercial activities, and they have certain levels of start-up capital, employees, and turnover. The Doing Business methodology on business taxes is consistent with the Total Tax Contribution framework developed by PricewaterhouseCoopers (now PwC), which measures the taxes that are borne by companies and that affect their income statements. However, PwC bases its calculation on data from the largest companies in the economy, while Doing Business focuses on a standardized medium-size company.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: The data covering taxes payable by businesses, measure all taxes and contributions that are government mandated (at any level - federal, state, or local), apply to standardized businesses, and have an impact in their income statements. The taxes covered go beyond the definition of a tax for government national accounts (compulsory, unrequited payments to general government) and also measure any imposts that affect business accounts. The main differences are in labor contributions and value added taxes. The data account for government-mandated contributions paid by the employer to a requited private pension fund or workers insurance fund but exclude value added taxes because they do not affect the accounting profits of the business - that is, they are not reflected in the income statement.

Aggregation method: Unweighted average

Periodicity: Annual

General Comments: Data are presented for the survey year instead of publication year.