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First Quantum Gets Time to Solve $7.9 Billion Zambia Tax Row

First Quantum Given Time to Solve $7.9 Billion Zambian Tax Row

(Bloomberg) -- Zambia agreed to give First Quantum Minerals Ltd. more time to complete its analysis of what the company might owe the southern African nation after it was slapped with a $7.9 billion tax bill, according to the finance minister.

The Vancouver-based company is challenging the assessment from Zambia’s revenue agency, which claims First Quantum incorrectly declared imports for one of its two mines in Africa’s second-biggest copper producer. The government has audited major mining companies operating in the country, which include Vedanta Resources Plc and Glencore Plc.

“They are doing their own analysis and they have asked for a bit more time,” Finance Minister Margaret Mwanakatwe, 56, said in an interview in her office in Lusaka, the capital, on Thursday. “We have given them a month so that they can complete the analysis.”

First Quantum declined to comment, it said in an emailed response to questions.

Copper accounts for more than 70 percent of exports in a nation that’s battling to contain ballooning external debt after spending on projects to boost infrastructure. Higher copper prices have helped support the economy after a slump from 2014 curbed income, added to debt and prompted the government to ask for assistance from the International Monetary Fund.

The government is seeking to expand revenue collection as it moves to keep its budget deficit to gross domestic product ratio under 10 percent, while ensuring it maintains its obligations to businesses, said Mwanakatwe.

VAT Refunds

While the Zambian Chamber of Mines says the government owes mining companies more than $350 million in value-added tax refunds, the revenue authority has warned it won’t pay out where liabilities are outstanding. First Quantum estimated it’s owed $368 million in unpaid VAT refunds.

The company’s shares were 0.8 percent lower at 10:45 a.m. in Toronto on Thursday.

First Quantum, which operates the Kansanshi and Kalumbila mines in the country, accounted for more than half of Zambia’s copper production last year and is the biggest individual taxpayer.

To contact the reporters on this story: Taonga Clifford Mitimingi in Johannesburg at tmitimingi@bloomberg.net;Gordon Bell in Johannesburg at gbell16@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Antony Sguazzin at asguazzin@bloomberg.net, Liezel Hill, John Bowker

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