VND4.1bn tax arrears bill for man
profiting from online business
Nguyen Nam Binh, vice head of HCM City Department of Taxation, said on
August 1 that they had collected VND4.1bn (USD164,000) in tax arrears and
fines from a local man that earned VND41bn from Facebook and Google ads.
illustrative image
The man
is a programmer whose game has been viewed and downloaded on Facebook, Google
and YouTube. He earned over VND41bn (USD1.6m) from ads in 2016 and 2017 but
didn't make any declarations or pay taxes.
He
promised to VND3bn in tax arrears and a VND1.1bn (USD44,000) administrative
fine. The tax arrears were detected when the Department of Taxation ordered
banks to check on incomes from Google, Facebook and YouTube that haven't
deduced taxes. Binh said they would continue checking other cases of huge
online incomes.
Another
individual in HCM City also earned VND30bn online but hasn't paid taxes. The
Department of Taxation said he was no longer living at the HCM City address
so the case was transferred to the Department of Taxation in Quang Nam where
the individual originally came from.
Binh said
the Law on Tax Administration required all businesspeople to pay tax. He went
on to say that both Facebook, Google, YouTube as well as local individuals
and firms that use the services hadn't fully complied with the tax
regulations.
The
authorities will zero in on Facebook accounts that are the most active and
have large incomes. Those who earn less than VND100m (USD4,400) a year online
must pay a business licence tax. Those with over VND100m of annual incomes
must pay additional VAT and personal income tax.
According
to the Department of Taxation, Facebook, Google and YouTube incomes at four
banks are in the range of VND500bn (USD20m).
Last
year, the Taxation Department has collected VND9.1bn (USD400,100) in tax
arrears from a Facebook account that sells cosmetics online.
nguoilaodong,
dtinews.vn
|
Thứ Năm, 2 tháng 8, 2018
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