Vietnam
finance ministry proposes raising VAT from 10 to 12 percent
Higher taxes
to be imposed on soft drinks, cigarettes and pickup trucks as well
Customers check out at
a supermarket in Ho Chi Minh City. Photo: Tuoi Tre
Vietnam’s Ministry of Finance is
looking to amend multiple tax laws in the country, including a proposal to
raise the current value-added tax (VAT) rate from ten to 12 percent.
The announcement came at a press
conference on Tuesday, where the ministry said it would amend five laws that
govern personal income tax, VAT, corporate income tax, special consumption
tax and natural resources tax.
The new VAT law would see a reduction
in the number of services and goods exempt from the tax, as well as the list
of those that currently enjoy a favorable VAT of only five percent.
Current laws impose a VAT of
zero percent on all exported goods, and a five-percent VAT on a number
of goods essential for agriculture, medicine, education, science and
technology.
For other goods and services, the
VAT is set at ten percent.
According to the finance ministry’s
announcement on Tuesday, the amended VAT law would impose a six-percent VAT
on services and goods currently enjoying a VAT of five percent, and raise the
across-the-board ten-percent VAT to 12 percent.
A number of VAT-free goods such as
fertilizers, agricultural equipments and off-shore fishing vessels would also
begin to be taxed under the new law, the ministry added.
The Ministry of Finance also
proposed a doubling of the current special consumption tax (SCT) rates on
pickup trucks.
Specifically, pickup trucks with a
cylinder capacity of up to 2,500cm3 will be subject to a
15-percent SCT.
For pickup trucks with cylinder
capacities of up to 3,000cm3, the
proposed new SCT is 20 percent, and 30 percent for anything above that.
Twenty-cigarette packs will be
subject to a 75 percent SCT starting from 2019, and from 2020, all cigarette
packs will be levied an extra VND1,000 (US$0.04) in SCT.
Also beginning in 2019, the ministry
is looking to impose an SCT of 10 percent on soft drinks, an item currently
exempt from the tax.
Revisions to corporate income tax
laws will offer a favorable tax rate of 15 percent for any small to medium
enterprise (SMEs) with a yearly revenue of less than VND3 billion ($132,200).
For SMEs with a yearly revenue of
between VND3-50 billion ($132,200-$2.2 million), the proposed tax rate is 17
percent, less than the current corporate income tax rate for SMEs of 20
percent.
The Ministry of Finance also plans
to revise current personal income tax calculations, allowing those with a
taxable monthly income of up to VND10 million ($440) to enjoy five-percent
tax rate.
Currently, only the first VND5
million ($220) in taxable income falls under the five-percent category, while
the next VND5 million ($220) is subject to an income tax rate of ten-percent.
By Tuoi Tre News
|
Thứ Tư, 16 tháng 8, 2017
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