Import/export tariff
rules need to be amended: businesses
Import and export tariff rules can be
interpreted in many different ways, putting pressure on businesses, many
companies have complained.
Pham Thi Loan, chair of Viet A Group, said the scheme
was “labyrinthine” and unclear.
“We are not sure how much tax to impose on our imports,
because the tariff is not clear enough,” she said. “In many cases, our tax
declarations were not accepted by customs agencies. They said imports must be
taxed higher.”
Businesses and customs agencies cannot agree on the tax
codes of the import products, which has led to confusion.
Viet A mostly imports transformers and other electrical
equipments which cannot be made domestically. In the past, the equipment had
the same tax code and the same tax rate. But now, the products have different
tax codes and rates.
“We are afraid that our tax declarations are wrong, and
we could be accused of fraud,” she said.
An optical fiber junction box, for example, has the
import tax rate of zero percent. However, customs agencies decided that the
product was subject to the 20 percent tax rate. This tax gap of 20 percent is
big enough to push businesses against the wall, Loan said.
A businessman, who took part in a meeting on October 30
between businesses and watchdog agencies on customs and tax procedures,
complained that legal documents related to import-export management were too
numerous.
“Businesses’ operations are not only covered by
official legal documents, but also the circulars and dispatches released by
branches and agencies,” he said.
The director of a private company in
“The same issues are mentioned in many different
documents, while some other issues cannot be found in any document,” he said.
“The unreasonable regulations cause legitimate businesses to feel upset, but lend
a hand to illegitimate ones to commit fraud.”
Nguyen Hong Khoai, deputy general director of the Hanoi
Business Development Consultancy Company, said he cannot understand why
businesses still have to sign and stamp so many papers, because e-declarations
and digital signatures are available in
Deputy Minister of Finance Do Hoang Anh Tuan admitted
that the problems exist, and that businesses will continue to encounter
difficulties until the regulations are amended.
Tuan recently said the ministry had asked the
government to add an import-export tariff amendment to the 2015 legislative
program.
Mai Thanh,
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Thứ Hai, 3 tháng 11, 2014
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