Vietnam Business Forum overshadowed by
tax, customs grievances
(L-R)
Vietnam's Minister of Planning and Investment Bui Quang Vinh, Vietnamese
Deputy Prime Minister Vu Van Ninh, and World Bank Country Director for
Vietnam Victoria Kwakwa are pictured at the Vietnam Business Forum in Hanoi
on December 1, 2015.
Businesses are still facing myriad difficulties in their
operations in Vietnam, many said at the Vietnam Business Forum (VBF)
final-term meeting in Hanoi on Tuesday.
The obstacles range from corrupt officers and erroneous
software in the customs sector, to complicated paperwork and continual
inspections in the field of tax, according to enterprises.
The VBF, known as one of the first public-private dialogue
projects implemented by the World Bank and its International Finance
Corporation, is held every six months in Hanoi to establish regular channels
of communication between foreign and domestic companies and the Vietnamese
government.
Most of the complaints raised at the Tuesday meeting are about
tax and customs matters, even though Vietnam has launched many reforms within
the two sectors.
The Vietnamese customs policies have changed so quickly and
frequently that businesses have had to abide by new regulations despite not
clearly understanding the old rules, the Vietnam Chamber of Commerce and
Industry (VCCI) said, citing its own report.
“There are customs officers who behave with total indifference
to the problems and damage this causes businesses,” the report says.
The programs used in customs declaration and clearance still
encounter errors, while both customs agencies and the software creators avoid
responsibility when facing complaints, according to the report.
Some software programs fail to read the barcode on the tax
declaration forms of businesses, while other systems only contain outdated
regulations, the VCCI elaborated.
Shimon Tokuyama, chairman of the Japanese Business Association
in Vietnam, complained that some customs officers still ask for unofficial
fees even after an automatic customs clearance system was implemented in
April last year.
In the meantime, Fred Burke, co-head of the Investment and
Trade Working Group with the VBF, said many businesses have obtained
investment incentives from the Vietnamese government, but these arrangements
are deliberately ignored by customs officers.
Sherry Boger, chairwoman of the American Chamber of Commerce
in Vietnam, warned that corruption is destroying both Vietnam’s economy and
society, and urged that stronger anti-corruption and anti-bribery measures be
taken.
Vu Tien Loc, chairman of the VCCI, also expressed his concern
that businesses continue to incur increasing costs to complete administrative
paperwork, and that their operations are inspected too frequently.
“The bigger a company is, the more inspections and checks it
has to undergo,” he whined.
“This is one of the reasons keeping businesses from expanding
their scale.”
Loc, citing the VCCI report, said tax inspection remains a
burden for businesses, and “there are too many agencies authorized to inspect
firms over tax issues.”
“Some businesses said that while they used to be inspected
every two years, the frequency is now once a year,” he added.
In his concluding speech at the forum, Vietnamese Deputy Prime
Minister Vu Van Ninh ordered that relevant industries and agencies seriously
consider grievances aired by businesses and seek resolutions to those issues.
He also urged agencies, particularly tax and customs, to
strengthen their administrative reforms to “create the most favorable
possible conditions for business.”
The VBF was established as a project of the Vietnam
Consultative Group at a meeting between the Vietnamese government and its
donor partners in Tokyo in 1997, according to the forum’s website.
The forum is widely recognized for contributing to reforms
that have improved the business environment in Vietnam.
The 2015 mid-term VBF was held in June, when the
Vietnamese government asserted it is “not satisfied” even though the
country’s socio-economic development has improved.
TUOI TRE NEWS
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Thứ Tư, 2 tháng 12, 2015
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