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Trade fraud threatens VAT refunds
Tax departments
in southwestern provinces that share a border with
At a conference on managing VAT
refunds held early this month in An Giang Province, the Inspection Department
under the General Department of Taxation revealed that many enterprises were
taking advantage of the policies on unofficial cross-border trade.
This includes cash payments, being
exempt from goods inspections or only having inspections on certain
quantities of goods, its representative said, adding, in many cases
enterprises were printing their own invoices so they could submit fake
documents for VAT refunds.
The VAT refund for enterprises which
have goods exported through unofficial cross-border trading between
Tax refunds from State's budget in
2011 rose by 194.6 per cent compared with 2010, refunds in 2012 also
increased by 190 per cent compared with 2011 while the amount of tax that
enterprises paid to the State was only about two per cent of all refunds.
In An Giang Province alone, the
authorities doubted the surge in exported mobile phones, as 10 local
enterprises claimed to have exported the same number of mobile phones as the
population of
Some enterprises were found to have
written their own invoices or used the invoices of other companies, to make
fake documents that helped them to get their VAT partially or wholly
refunded.
Other enterprises have taken
advantage of the border between
Deputy head of An Giang Customs
Department Nguyen Tan Binh said that after detecting the cross-border trade
fraud, the department stepped up its inspections.
They stopped granting customs
verification to large sums of Vietnamese dong that Cambodian business brought
into
However, customs officers would make
post-clearance audits suddenly, without warning because in many cases, after
being informed of the audit, many enterprises took the first steps towards
insolvency.
Binh said that under staffing and a
lack of space to examine goods in were the major difficulties.
The recording procedures used by
customs was very reliant on the completed customs application submitted by
enterprises, which also posed many risks.
The Director General of the General
Department of Taxation, Bui Van Nam, said that to curb violations relating to
VAT refunds, the general department was asking the Finance Ministry to not
allow cash payments in unofficial cross-border trading and local exporters
are now required to submit goods export contracts in their tax refund
applications.
He also urged the relevant agencies
in the south western provinces including taxation, customs, banking and the
police, to work closer together to curb the fraudulent VAT refunds, which
have caused a serious loss to the State's budget.
Viet Nam and Cambodia share a 1,270km
long border, encompassing the provinces of Binh Phuoc, Tay Ninh, Long An,
Dong Thap, An Giang and Kien Giang. Altogether they house 47 border gates and
nine border economic zones, to facilitate cross-border trade.
Source: VNS
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Thứ Ba, 13 tháng 8, 2013
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