Zimbabwe’s Income Tax Act contains a general anti-avoidance rule (GAAR) in section 98. Under this provision, if any transaction, operation or scheme is entered into which has the effect of avoiding or postponing tax or reducing tax payable, and if that transaction is undertaken in an abnormal manner or creates rights that would not normally arise between arm’s-length parties, the Commissioner may recalculate tax as if the transaction had not occurred in that form. In practice, this means ZIMRA can ignore or recharacterise artificial arrangements whose sole or main purpose is tax avoidance. For example, if a sale of property between related parties is structured at a sham price solely to reduce tax, the Commissioner can impose tax as if the sale were at market value. The GAAR thus covers any scheme or transaction (including property transfers) that would not normally be employed in ordinary commercial dealings, if its main purpose is to save tax.
Unlike tax evasion (illegal tax fraud or misdeclaration), avoidance under Section 98 is not itself a crime, but a legal adjustment tool. No specific fine is prescribed in the Act for merely triggering GAAR – the remedy is to “determine the liability for any tax as if the transaction or operation had not been entered into”. In effect, the Commissioner can re-calculate taxable income on a reasonable basis (for example by applying fair market values or commercial terms) and collect the resulting additional tax, interest and any civil penalties. Importantly, the Court will generally require a clear finding that avoidance was the taxpayer’s sole or main purpose; bona fide commercial objectives may not attract GAAR.
| Aspect | Tax Avoidance | Tax Evasion |
|---|---|---|
| Nature | Legal use of tax rules (e.g. deductions, timing) to minimize tax; subject to GAAR | Illegal concealment or misrepresentation of facts (non‑declaration, fraud) |
| Examples | Transferring income to lower-rate relative, using tax-free entities, shifting timing of income | Underreporting sales, keeping cash off the books, false invoices (violating duties under the Act) |
| Law | Regulated by GAAR (Section 98), which allows ZIMRA to adjust or disregard the arrangement | Prohibited by criminal offences (e.g. wilful failure to submit correct returns or false statements under Sections 84–86) |
| Consequences | Tax adjustment to reflect economic reality; possible penalties/interest for understatement | Criminal prosecution, fines and/or imprisonment; additional assessments and penalties for fraud |
This comparison highlights that avoidance is lawful (until adjusted by GAAR), whereas evasion is unlawful and punishable by the general offences provisions. In Zimbabwe, deliberate evasion (e.g. making false tax returns) can lead to fines or jail under Sections 84–86 of the Income Tax Act, whereas avoidance schemes simply trigger assessment corrections under Section 98. ZIMRA Guidance and case law stress that intent and unusual form are key: an artificial transaction entered solely for tax benefit falls under Section 98, whereas genuine business dealings at arm’s length do not.
