Morocco VAT fraud estimated at 12.9 billion dirhams annually

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Morocco VAT fraud estimated at 12.9 billion dirhams annually
By: Dakir Madiha
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Morocco faces a large and persistent loss of public revenue linked to value added tax fraud, estimated at around 12.9 billion dirhams per year. The figure reflects a system in which fraudulent refund claims continue to exploit structural weaknesses in tax administration and corporate reporting. Public finance experts describe the phenomenon as deeply embedded in the fiscal architecture rather than a series of isolated cases.

The VAT system allows businesses to deduct tax paid on inputs from tax collected on sales. When deductions exceed collections, companies can request refunds from the treasury. Fraud networks exploit this mechanism by generating false invoices for transactions that never occurred. These documents are then used to inflate deductible VAT and justify reimbursement claims supported by apparently compliant accounting records.

Fraud schemes are typically organized through interconnected companies, often newly created entities or dormant firms activated for short cycles. These structures issue fictitious invoices across chains of suppliers and intermediaries to obscure traceability. Once the refund is processed, funds are rapidly dispersed, making recovery difficult. Tax specialists note that these schemes have evolved over time, becoming more layered and harder to detect.

The construction and public works sector represents one of the most exposed segments due to its fragmented subcontracting structure and high transaction volume. Wholesale trade and business services also feature prominently in detected cases. Authorities face a significant capacity gap, with limited audit personnel compared to hundreds of thousands of taxable entities, which reduces the ability to systematically verify claims before reimbursement.

The scale of undetected fraud remains high despite enforcement efforts. Tax administration data suggests that only a fraction of fraudulent declarations are intercepted. Policy responses increasingly focus on prevention rather than post-refund control, particularly through electronic invoicing systems that validate transactions in real time. Additional reforms include improved data sharing between fiscal, social, and commercial registries, as well as stronger sanctions and the potential development of whistleblower mechanisms.

An economist and tax finance specialist at Mohammed V University in Rabat argues that the economic cost extends beyond lost revenue. He estimates that recovered amounts could significantly increase public investment capacity in health and education while improving fiscal equity between compliant and non-compliant firms. He also stresses that the main challenge lies not in identifying solutions but in accelerating implementation and coordination between institutions.