• About
  • Contact
  • Advertise
  • Privacy
  • e-Paper
  • Terms Of Service
Friday, June 12, 2026
  • Login
  • Register
The Mast Logo
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • e-Paper
  • Politics
  • Courts & Crime
  • Biz
  • Health
    Experts call for ebola preparedness

    Experts call for ebola preparedness

    Mpongwe to get 10m mosquito nets

    Mpongwe to get 10m mosquito nets

    Dr. Oliver Kandela Bulaya, PhD

    Mental health pillar for climate resilience – expert

    Mary Kafunga

    NGO calls for mental support for police

  • Tech
    Zambia makes strides towards cyber security   

    Zambia makes strides towards cyber security  

    Texas becomes first state to ban DeepSeek, Rednote on government devices after fury over China-backed apps

    Texas becomes first state to ban DeepSeek, Rednote on government devices after fury over China-backed apps

    PARALYSED MAN FLIES VIRTUAL DRONE USING BRAIN IMPLANT.

  • Sports
  • World
  • Columnists
  • Opinion
  • Features
  • Today’s
  • Home
  • e-Paper
  • Politics
  • Courts & Crime
  • Biz
  • Health
    Experts call for ebola preparedness

    Experts call for ebola preparedness

    Mpongwe to get 10m mosquito nets

    Mpongwe to get 10m mosquito nets

    Dr. Oliver Kandela Bulaya, PhD

    Mental health pillar for climate resilience – expert

    Mary Kafunga

    NGO calls for mental support for police

  • Tech
    Zambia makes strides towards cyber security   

    Zambia makes strides towards cyber security  

    Texas becomes first state to ban DeepSeek, Rednote on government devices after fury over China-backed apps

    Texas becomes first state to ban DeepSeek, Rednote on government devices after fury over China-backed apps

    PARALYSED MAN FLIES VIRTUAL DRONE USING BRAIN IMPLANT.

  • Sports
  • World
  • Columnists
  • Opinion
  • Features
  • Today’s
No Result
View All Result
The Mast Logo
No Result
View All Result
Home News

UPND defends yuan mine tax payments

 By George Zulu

January 6, 2026
in News
Malawi, Botswana political shift not for Zambia, Simmuwe

Mark Simuuwe

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

UPND defends yuan mine tax payments

 By George Zulu

THE United Party for National Development (UPND) says the decision by government to allow the use of China’s national currency for mining tax payments will directly benefit the country.

The party’s media director Mark Simuuwe yesterday defended the new policy measure.

Simuuwe said the Chinese yuan was an optional trading currency acceptable worldwide.

“…warmly welcomes the government’s decision to approve the use of the Chinese yuan [renminbi] as an optional currency for the payment of mining taxes and royalties by eligible mining companies. This policy position is a pragmatic, strategic and economically driven decision, anchored in Zambia’s trade realities, debt profile and the structure of its mining sector,” he said.

Simuuwe said allowing the use of the yuan would significantly reduce exchange rate risk and exposure, particularly translation and conversion costs that arise when transactions were in dollars.

“It will also reduce transaction and clearing costs associated with third-party systems such as the New York Clearing House, thereby enhancing efficiency for both the government and the private sector. Importantly, this decision has direct benefits in relation to debt service management,” he said.

Simuuwe said China remained Zambia’s largest bilateral creditor, and a significant portion of its external debt obligations were denominated in Chinese financing arrangements.

He said facilitating yuan-denominated inflows from mining taxes would improve government’s capacity to match revenues with debt service obligations, reduce currency mismatch risks and enhance overall debt sustainability.

“The mining sector is the backbone of Zambia’s economy, contributing significantly to the government revenue, export earnings, employment, and foreign exchange inflows. Notably, the sector has a strong and growing Chinese presence, with major Chinese investments across copper mining, processing, and related infrastructure,” he said.

Simuuwe said the ruling party believed that the framework should go beyond mining taxes and Chinese debt service but extend to broader Zambia-China trade and investment activities, including imports, exports, project financing and industrial cooperation.

“The broader economic benefits of this decision include: Lower transaction and compliance costs for mining companies and investors; reduced pressure on US dollar demand, supporting foreign exchange market stability; improved predictability and efficiency in revenue collection for the government,” he said.

Simuuwe said the decision was not a political move but a sound economic reform, consistent with global best practice as it reflects the New Dawn government’s commitment to fiscal prudence, innovation, and economic transformation.

Previous Post

Makebi supports rebirth of People’s Pact

Next Post

Come join us, People’s Pact woos opposition

Next Post
Bob Sichinga

Come join us, People’s Pact woos opposition

Please login to join discussion

Join Us Today

  • 334.9K
    Followers
    334.9K
    Followers
  • Click To Join
    Subscribers
    Click To Join
    Subscribers
  • 7K
    Followers
    7K
    Followers
The Mast Newspaper

Bringing you breaking news, in-depth stories, and exclusive content at lightning speed.

Follow Us

  • About
  • Contact
  • Advertise
  • Privacy
  • e-Paper
  • Terms Of Service

© 2025 Published by Mast Media Limited

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

*By registering into our website, you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.
All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • e-Paper
  • Politics
  • Courts & Crime
  • Biz
  • Health
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • World
  • Columnists
  • Opinion
  • Features
  • Today’s

© 2025 Published by Mast Media Limited

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.