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Vietnam asks Big C to fulfill tax
responsibility before making managerial adjustments
A Big C outlet is
pictured in Ho Chi Minh City. Tuoi Tre
Vietnam’s
General Department of Taxation has requested local tax agencies in 20
locations Big C has operations in to ensure that the supermarket chain has
fulfilled tax liabilities before renewing its business license or changing
its legal representatives.
Two
months after the finalization of a massive deal that sees it transferred to a Thai
owner, French-owned supermarket chain Big C Vietnam is in dispute with the
local tax authorities over the tax liability on a 1 billion euro (US$1.14
billion) sale.
On
April 29, Thai conglomerate Central Group announced it hadacquired Big C’s operations in Vietnam, including 32 outlets
countrywide, from France's Casino Group.
According
to Vietnamese law, parties involved in this type of transfer must declare and
pay taxes within ten days of an agreement being reached.
Vietnam
is expected to collect VND3.6 trillion ($160.71 million) in tax from the
transfer, according to the General Department of Taxation.
However,
two months after the deadline, neither Casino Group nor Central Group, which
paid an enormous 1 billion euros to acquire 32 Big C outlets across Vietnam,
has taken any step to fulfill their tax obligations.
Despite
this, the entities set up to manage some of the Big C Vietnam stores have
already made, or are in the process of making, managerial adjustments.
For
instance, the entity that operates the Big C outlet in the north-central
province of Thanh Hoa last month completed paperwork to have Thai national
Phoom Chirathivat replace Frenchman Philippe Jean Broianigo as its legal
representative.
Other
stores, including the Big C Thang Long in Hanoi, have also lodged
applications with the local investment department to make similar managerial
changes.
Those
moves have upset the General Department of Taxation, which has asked taxmen
in 20 provinces and cities to review the paperwork before approving any
applications from businesses under the Big C Vietnam umbrella.
“The
General Department of Taxation has also suggested that local investment
departments, administrations and tax agencies collaborate with each other to
ensure that Big C fulfills its tax responsibility before approving its
requests,” deputy head of the tax watchdog Nguyen Dai Tri told Tuoi
Tre (Youth) newspaper on Sunday.
The
general taxation department has worked with the finance ministry to enact
measures to collect taxes from the Central Group – Casino Group transfer
deal, as well as verifying whether the parties involved have bypassed any
laws, Tri added.
TUOI TRE
NEWS
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Thứ Hai, 4 tháng 7, 2016
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