Burkina Faso: Digitalization of the fiscal stamp, a Strategic leap for transparency and revenue security

Engaged since 2023 in a vast digital transformation of its administration, Burkina Faso has crossed a decisive threshold with the dematerialization of the fiscal stamp. Officially launched on November 20, 2023, by the Ministry of Economy and Finance, the “e-Timbre” platform embodies a clear break with past practices and lays the groundwork for modernized public management that is more transparent and economically more efficient.

Before this reform, the physical stamp was a source of multiple dysfunctions. Citizens endured recurrent shortages, fueling a parallel market where resellers speculated on prices, sometimes selling a 200 FCFA stamp for 300 FCFA, or even more.

This manual system, opaque and vulnerable to counterfeiting, deprived the state of significant revenue and hindered any reliable budget planning.

With the shift to digital, supply is now continuous and accessible at any time, from any locality with an internet connection. Stock shortages, the bane of the paper system, are a thing of the past.

This permanent availability puts an end to user frustrations and speculative practices, thereby restoring purchasing power to citizens and credibility to public action. Prices are now fixed and transparent, with a range from 10 FCFA to 25,000 FCFA to cover all needs.

The most structurally significant advance for the national economy lies in the securing of tax revenues.

The e-Timbre system introduces total traceability: each stamp purchased and cancelled leaves an undeniable digital imprint (date, time, agent).

Gone are the days when a simple pen stroke or an approximate stamp sufficed to validate a paper stamp, leaving the door open to falsification and fraudulent cash collections.

Now, a digital obliteration mechanism guarantees the uniqueness and authenticity of each transaction.

For the state, this is a revolution: it can now monitor stamp consumption in real time, establish precise statistics, and optimize its revenue forecasts.

Digitalization thus enables better mobilization of internal resources, a crucial issue in the current context of economic resilience.

As the Minister of Economy emphasized during the launch, this reform contributes to “strengthening trust between the public administration and its users” by effectively combating fraud and counterfeiting.

The dematerialization of the fiscal stamp is not merely a simple technical innovation.

It is a strategic lever that consolidates the economic sovereignty of Burkina Faso by securing its resources, while laying the foundations for a modern, efficient administration that respects its citizens.

This reform embodies the state’s determination to put digital technology at the service of development and good governance.

Cédric KABORE

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