Business leaders speak out against
irrational charges
Leaders of the business community
claim that reductions in taxes and fees and the removal of irrational
business conditions should be among the key measures for the government to
keep enterprises afloat.
Virginia Foote, governor of the
American Chamber of Commerce in Vietnam, said that enterprises in Vietnam
still suffer from various types of taxes and fees as well as irrational
business conditions.
“While the government looks to boost
the limited state budget by increasing the collection of taxes and fees,
enterprises are reluctant to pay, as many taxes and fees are irrational,”
said Foote, who is also president and CEO of business advisory firm Bay
Global Strategies, LLC, at this week’s conference on facilitating Vietnam’s
continued growth. The conference was organised by the Ministry of Planning
and Investment (MPI).
Late last month, the Ministry of
Finance (MoF) announced that it had proposed increasing the value-added tax
(VAT) from the existing 10 to 12 per cent on January 1, 2019, to ensure
national financial security. If the proposal is enacted, the VAT hike will
affect all consumers and more than 600,000 enterprises.
“The government should not increase
taxes, but create a level business field for all enterprises. When
enterprises perform well, they will pay more taxes and the budget will
increase,” Foote said.
Early this week, Dau Anh Tuan, head
of Vietnam Chamber of Commerce and Industry (VCCI)’s Legislation Department,
received a complaint from a local firm in the northern province of Thai
Nguyen. The firm lamented that for each shipment of goods, it has to pay an
average $18,200 for seaport infrastructure fees in the northern port of
Haiphong, in addition to needing several sub-licences when importing goods
into Vietnam.
“The firm’s director told me that he
is mulling over reducing the size of or even shutting down the firm,” Tuan
told the conference. “Each year, this firm contributes VND30 billion ($1.36
million) to the state budget, and, like so many others in Vietnam, this firm
has to pay too many types of taxes, fees, and sub-licences—though the prime
minister has ordered the removal of unnecessary taxes, fees, and sub-licences
in favour of enterprises.”
Recently, MPI asked the government
to launch campaigns to review and reduce assorted types of business costs and
conditions for firms, including loans, administrative procedures, logistics,
and transport, as well as removing loopholes in state management that create
informal costs for enterprises.
“Vietnam-based firms are subject to
very high levels of fees and charges, and business conditions which are
undermining the economy’s competitiveness,” Minister of Planning and
Investment Nguyen Chi Dung said, citing many examples of financial burdens hurting
enterprises.
For example, enterprises currently
have to pay environmental protection fees for up to 30 years. Ironically, the
fee is applied to all types of waste and enterprises.
In another case, the average
transportation cost of a container from the Haiphong port to Hanoi is three
times higher than from Korea and China to Hanoi.
Moreover, the minister also said the
average tax-based cost in Vietnam accounts for 39 per cent of enterprises’
total profit, which is the highest rate within the ASEAN+4 (Indonesia,
Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand), and double that of Singapore.
In addition, the average cost for
testing a package of goods in Vietnam has increased by 1.5-2 times over the
past few years, though it requires a relatively long wait of up to 10 days.
“I would say that enterprises are
not in need of much more support from the government. They only need simpler
administrative procedures and a clear legal system,” Dung stressed.
More than one week ago, the prime
minister ordered a moratorium on raising taxes and fees until the year’s end
in a bid to support enterprises.
Last month, he also ordered all
ministries and agencies to review and erase all unnecessary fees and business
conditions currently encumbering enterprises and investors in line with the
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development’s “principles of a
competitive market.”
Results must be reported to MPI,
which will then report on the progress to the government by December.
“Many ministries are enacting
sub-licences, making it hard for enterprises. For example, one ministry has
issued as many as 1,220 unnecessary sub-licences, while the Ministry of
Construction has the fewest sub-licences at 106,” said Mai Tien Dung,
Minister and Chairman of the Government Office.
According to VCCI, Vietnam currently
designates 243 sectors and professions as conditional, subject to a total of
5,719 business conditions.
By Nguyen Thanh, VIR
|
Thứ Tư, 27 tháng 9, 2017
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