Tax crackdown nets
FDI enterprises
A tax management
crackdown was thought to have resulted in higher tax contributions from
foreign-invested enterprises.
In the V1000, which lists the top
1,000 enterprises in
Among the 458 new names on the list,
foreign companies accounted for over 45 per cent, while domestic private
sector and state owned enterprises (SOEs) contributed 37.1 percent and 17.5
per cent, respectively.
“2012 marked a positive change for
FIEs’ tax contributions to
Recently,
According to recent inspection
results, the General Department of Taxation (GDT) checked the business
results of 5,531 FIEs, 60 per cent of the total operational in the country,
and found “worrying problems”.
Of the 5,531 FIEs, a mere 3,175
enterprises, or 57.4 per cent, posted a profit, and 529 enterprises reported
losses despite steadily increasing turnover.
The GDT reported that numerous FIEs
repeatedly reported losses and asked for tax refunds, while unceasingly
expanding their businesses. Meanwhile, domestic enterprises, operating in the
same business fields and under the similar conditions, reported profits and
paid corporate income tax.
The GDT inspected 122 FIEs and found
many of them guilty of transfer pricing, including Keangnam Vina, the
Korean-backed developer of
Those enterprises were forced to pay
tax arrears of over VND200 billion ($9.5 million). Big-name foreign companies
such as Adidas, Coca-Cola and PepsiCo came under scrutiny suspected of
transfer pricing.
In 2012, the local tax authority
checked and inspected 2,027 enterprises showing signs of transfer pricing and
related parties transactions and collected back tax of VND683.5 billion
($32.55 million).
A GDT representative said that the
recent efforts of the local tax authority in tightening tax management had
caused many enterprises to report higher profits than those in previous
years. Minh also argued that the positive business performance in 2012 of
FIEs, most of which focus on exports, was another reason behind their bigger
tax contribution.
FIEs’ ranking also advanced given the
domestic economic sectors’ financial woes due to shrunk domestic consumption
and bad debts.
In 2012, FIEs accounted for 55.9 per
cent of the country’s total export turnover value of $114.57 billion,
according to figures of the Ministry of Industry and Trade. They recorded an
export turnover of $64.05 billion, up 33.8 per cent year-on-year, while roughly
$59.94 billion worth of goods were imported, an increase of 22.7 per cent on
the same period. Meanwhile, the export turnover of SOEs only made up around
40 per cent, a 1.3 per cent increase against 2011.
Senior economist Le Dang Doanh added
that FIEs were not feeling the pressure of high interest rates or inflation
as in previous years, which helped them make greater tax contributions.
Source: VIR
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Thứ Ba, 3 tháng 12, 2013
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