Manila Bulletin

Singapore mulls imposing tax on e-commerce

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Singapore may unveil an e-commerce tax in next week’s budget, setting the tone for a region that’s grappling with online retail’s assault on brick-andmortar vendors.

Eight of the 12 economists in a Bloomberg survey said the Feb. 19 budget will contain a new tax on online vendors, with another betting that cross-border digital transactio­ns will now be included in the goods-and-services tax regime. Thailand, Indonesia, and Malaysia – where government­s are funding ambitious infrastruc­ture programs – are also considerin­g similar plans.

Southeast Asian government­s are seeking to level the playing field for traditiona­l vendors given the rapid growth of online retailing on platforms such as Lazada, controlled by Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., and Amazon.com, Inc. BMI Research projects the region’s six biggest economies will boost e-commerce to $64.8 billion in 2021 from $37.7 billion last year, while Credit Suisse Group AG estimates that online shopping growth could outpace that of traditiona­l retailers by six to 10 times over the next few years.

An e-commerce tax would ease “the competitio­n for offline retailers that have been struggling amid the rising popularity of online shopping,” Nainika Singh, consumer analyst at BMI Research, said by email. “We are likely to see other Southeast Asian markets follow Singapore’s implementa­tion of this e-commerce tax.”

The road ahead won’t be easy, according to economists Chua Hak Bin and Lee Ju Ye at Maybank Kim Eng Research in Singapore. In Vietnam and the Philippine­s, online sellers have found ways to evade paying taxes – posting goods and services on social media, boosting cash transactio­ns and running multiple sales websites, they wrote in a research note Sunday.

While government officials have been tight-lipped about specific plans in the upcoming budget, they’ve cited an urgent need to get organized around the taxation of online merchants.

Online shoppers in Singapore are generally able to avoid levies on purchases that don’t exceed S$400 ($300), but given how quickly the industry has transforme­d, a tax change should’ve been made on this front “probably yesterday,” Indranee Rajah, senior minister of state for law and finance, said in November.

Rajah said in a radio interview last week that the government was still studying the ecommerce tax and it’s certainly something they’d like to implement, according to a Business Times report.

Thailand’s Revenue Department expects a proposed e-business levy will triple annual tax revenue growth to 15 percent, according to a Bangkok Post report, quoting Director General Prasong Poontaneat.

The draft bill sets the ceiling rate at 15 percent and would apply to online vendors whose domain name is registered in Thailand and who have a payment system in baht or transfer money from within the country.

In Indonesia, where e-commerce is booming and the government is struggling to boost revenue, there’s a special urgency for taxes.

Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati told reporters on Jan. 19 that the government would soon be issuing a new rule on e-commerce after consultati­ons with ministries and agencies.

“The basic principle is that we will create a level playing field, the tax approach for e-commerce and convention­al players will be the same,” especially for value-added taxation, she said.

In order to protect smalland medium-sized enterprise­s that supply much of the newly taxed vendors, the government is proposing a lower income tax for those merchants, Indrawati said.

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