In Vietnam, firms still have to bribe
customs to get clearance: survey
People
complete customs clearance at the Cat Lai Seaport in Ho Chi Minh City.
Tuoi
Tre
A 2015 survey asking firms in Vietnam if they have to pay
unofficial fees for quicker customs clearance received fewer "yes"
responses than in previous years, but under-the-table money is still an issue
for many businesses.
Twenty-eight percent of the businesses polled by the Vietnam
Chamber of Commerce and Industry (VCCI) said they had to pay ‘black money’ to
customs officials, compared to the 49 percent and 57 percent recorded in the
same survey in 2013 and 2012, respectively.
The VCCI did not conduct the survey last year.
It is worth noticing that 37 percent of the respondents in the
2015 survey of 3,100 businesses refused to answer the ‘unofficial fee’
question, the VCCI said in its results report released on Thursday.
Customs agencies in Ho Chi Minh City, Binh Duong Province and
Ba Ria – Vung Tau Province in the south, and Hanoi, Lang Son Province and
Thanh Hoa Province in the north, received the most complaints for demanding
under-the-table money from businesses, according to the results.
While businesses agree that customs procedures in Vietnam are
“available and accessible,” 20 percent of the respondents said the paperwork
to clear customs is “complicated and hard to understand,” Dau Tuan Anh, head
of legislation with VCCI, said.
Thirty-one percent of the businesses said they had to pay an
unofficial fee to avoid being ‘discriminated’ by customs officials.
“[Businesses] have to wait longer to get customs clearance, or
asked to supply papers or documents that the laws do not require if they
refuse to pay under the table,” Anh explained.
Respondents also complained about rigid procedures to get a
tax refund or apply for a tax exemption.
Seventy-three percent said there are too many forms to fill in
to complete customs clearance, whereas 31 percent whined they had been asked
to supply information or documents that were not included in customs rules.
“All of these results illustrate that businesses are still
facing real problems when it comes to customs,” Pham Thanh Binh, a customs
expert, said.
Binh added the customs sector has actually changed and
reformed its regulations to facilitate corporate operations, but there are
still many unsolved issues.
“The regulations on getting a tax refund is so complicated
that even a man with 30 years of experience like me feels dizzy reading them,
let alone new businesses,” he said.
TUOI TRE NEWS
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Thứ Sáu, 13 tháng 11, 2015
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