Tax-free
 necessities: People are still not aware that their basic needs will be 
protected under the proposed GST regime because essential food items 
like rice, meat, fish, seafood, chicken, vegetables, cooking oil and 
salt will be ‘zero-rated’, which means there will no GST imposed.  
  
When
 the Finance Minister tabled Budget 2013 and reduced personal income tax
 rate by 1%, some quarters have asked if this brings us one step closer 
to the GST.
EVER grumbled about having to pay the RM50 government tax for your credit card each year?
Well,
 the good news is there will be no more such tax if the proposed GST 
(goods and services tax) is implemented. And you will pay GST on the 
credit card only if your bank charges you for the card.
“These 
days, banks are offering credits cards for free and giving waivers on 
annual subscription. If the card is free, there will be no GST on it,” 
says Customs Department director-general 
Datuk Khazali Ahmad in an interview.
He
 stresses that key sectors like the financial services, public 
transport, healthcare, education and residential housing will be exempt 
from GST.
This essentially means that education, medical care, 
bus and train tickets as well as highway tolls will still be just as 
affordable as today. Thus, the lower income groups will not be burdened 
by the GST.
When it comes to insurance, Khazali says, if it is a 
life policy (including education, investment-linked and endowment), no 
GST will be imposed. But if it is a general insurance policy for 
medical, fire, motor, burglary, then the normal GST rate (proposed at 
4%) will apply.
Despite the GST being a fairer, more effective 
and transparent taxation system and one that has been successfully 
implemented in 146 countries, it has not been easy to push the idea 
through in Malaysia.
In fact, the government has been talking about the GST for more than two decades now (even when 
Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim was the Finance Minister in the 1990s).
In
 December 2009, the GST bill was tabled in parliament for first reading 
but it was withdrawn on April 19 this year for amendments.
The Finance Ministry on its website has asked the public for views and feedback on the proposed GST.
With public awareness still very low on how GST works, it might be years before it actually comes to fruition.
People
 are still not aware that their basic needs will be protected under the 
proposed GST regime because essential food items like rice, meat, fish, 
seafood, chicken, vegetables, cooking oil and salt will be “zero-rated”,
 which means there will no GST imposed.
Critical services like 
schools, financial services, hospitals, roads and public transport will 
be “GST-exempt”, which means the consumer will be exempted from paying 
GST on them.
And if you buy a flight ticket to a destination abroad, you will not have to pay GST.
“You
 will be charged GST only on goods and services (which are not zero or 
exempt-rated) that you consume in the country what you consume outside 
the country will not be subject to a local GST. A flight ticket abroad 
and overseas travel is consumption outside Malaysia, so you don't pay 
GST here on it,” says Khazali.
The GST is a consumption-based tax where the tax is borne by the person who consumes the goods or services.
Ultimately,
 it should reduce business costs because manufacturers, distributors and
 suppliers are able to claim back the GST they paid on goods and 
services acquired for the purpose of their business.
And these businesses are supposed to pass those savings down to the consumer, which should result in lower prices.
Khazali says people find it hard to accept the GST even though it benefits them because “tax” is never a popular subject.
“Generally, nobody likes to be taxed or, rather, the word “tax” is taboo to many.
“However,
 governments all over the world need to impose tax to get the revenue to
 provide their citizens with their social needs, employment, security 
and so forth.”
Educating consumers on the GST, he admits, is not 
easy because the moment you say that GST is a form of tax, “you will be 
faced with a wall of resistance”.
“So we have to explain the GST 
and its benefits to the people continuously to avoid or eliminate 
whatever misconception they have about it,” he adds.
Khazali also
 notes that most people do not know that the GST actually replaces the 
current sales and services tax which they have already been paying on a 
lot of goods and services because it is embedded in the price of what 
they buy.
Under the current system, by the time the goods reach 
the consumers, the sales tax that is paid at the manufacturers level 
would have cascaded at each level of the distribution and the supply 
chain, and this results in a higher price.
But with the GST, 
since businesses at every stage are able to get a refund on the GST paid
 on the goods and services acquired or used for the purpose of their 
business, this will eliminate the cascading effect suffered under the 
current sales and services taxes.
And because of this, an 
immediate reduction in prices should be seen for goods and services 
where people have all along been paying an embedded sales tax.
He
 also stresses that the government has repeatedly emphasised that the 
people will have to understand the GST first before the government 
actually implements it.
“The public should not have any fear over
 GST. It is a form of consumption tax which has been implemented in 
nearly 150 countries in the world, whether developed or developing, so 
there must be something good about it. “
He says the GST is also 
supposed to result in cheaper prices for imported goods. At present, 
unless exempted, imported goods are subject to an import duty and sales 
tax.
 People
 find it hard to accept the GST even though it benefits them because 
‘tax’ is never a popular subject. - Datuk Khazali Ahmad
 People
 find it hard to accept the GST even though it benefits them because 
‘tax’ is never a popular subject. - Datuk Khazali Ahmad  
 
With
 the GST replacing the sales tax (5% to 10%), imported goods will still 
be subject to an import duty and a GST; but because the proposed GST 
rate is lower than the existing sales tax, consumers should be paying 
less.
Before implementing the GST too, he says, the government 
will also educate businesses on the need to pass down the savings they 
get from the GST refund, and set up a mechanism to stop businesses from 
trying to profiteer from it.
For him, the GST is a good thing 
because it will reduce business costs, lead to more competitive pricing,
 make exports more competitive because exports will be zero-rated 
(meaning no GST), increase gross domestic production and reduce grey 
economy activities.
Khazali also believes there might be a change
 in consumption pattern with the GST because the GST works on the 
affordability concept.
“Consumers have to decide which goods or 
services to buy. They pay GST only when the goods or services are 
consumed. So they may divert more of their expenses towards essential 
goods and services rather than on luxury goods.”
Khazali also 
points out that if the GST is implemented here at the proposed rate of 
4%, it will be the lowest rate in the region.
Indonesia, Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam and Laos charge a 10% GST rate, Philippines 12% and Singapore 7%.
But what is to stop the government from hiking the rate after it has been implemented?
Khazali
 cites past experiences, saying Malaysia increased its sales tax rate 
only once from 5% in 1972 (year of implementation) to 10% in 1983 and 
service tax rate too increased only once, from 5% in 1975 (year of 
implementation) to 6% in 2011.
There are still nuts and bolts to 
sort out with implementing the GST here, including tabling a new bill 
for it, putting an anti-profiteering mechanism in place, getting public 
understanding and acceptance on it. For now, it looks like it is still 
quite a long journey away.
Is GST the way to go?
No
 burden: The people can be assured of zero tax on basic essential items 
like rice, cooking oil, meat, chicken, vegetables, sugar, salt and 
water.  
The Goods and Services Tax has been 
successfully implemented in 146 countries but many Malaysians are still 
unaware of its benefits.
JAYCEE Sim (not her real name) is a 
self-professed shopaholic who loves nothing more than spending her 
weekends at shopping malls. She is thus pleased with the one per cent 
cut in income tax rate announced in the Budget 2013 (for chargeable 
income up to RM50,000) because some extra money in the pocket is always 
welcome, especially when prices have been on the rise.
But she dreads the much-talked about Goods and Services Tax (GST) which has yet to be implemented in the country.
“I
 think it will cause a further hike in prices,” says Sim who teaches at a
 private college. But her friend, Debbie Lim, who owns her own business 
supplying component parts, is all for the GST.
“I think it is 
only fair. You pay for what you consume. You consume more, you pay more 
tax. If you don't spend, then you don't pay
 lah,” says Lim, who has family members in Singapore and has seen how the GST works there.
Lim too loves to shop and enjoys trying out new food places with friends.
She
 believes that post-GST, she can continue to do this without feeling the
 pinch, because there will be zero tax on essential food products like 
meat, chicken, fish, seafood be it locally produced or imported.
“Hey, without tax, maybe food prices can even come down. I can live with that!” she laughs.
So far, 146 countries have imposed the GST which is seen as a more efficient form of tax.
In
 Malaysia, which has a population of 28 million, there are approximately
 12 million people in the workforce but only 1.7 million pay taxes.
PricewaterhouseCoopers Taxation Services Sdn Bhd senior 
executive director Wan Heng Choon refers to the GST as a fairer tax.
“I
 fall under the unfair' category of paying taxes. Out of our population 
of 28 million, I am one of the 1.7mil paying taxes. The rest of the 
population do not contribute but consume the same goods and services 
(like roads, schools, hospitals, public transport etc.) that the 
government provides for every single one of us. How can that be fair?” 
People here generally fear the GST, he says, because they do not 
understand how it works.
“Tell me which country will introduce a 
tax that drives prices up? It doesn't make sense. The GST has been 
successfully implemented in 146 countries. The difficulty here is that 
the simple mechanism is not understood,” he adds.
The people, he 
says, can be assured of zero tax on basic essential items like rice, 
cooking oil, beef, mutton, pork, chicken, fish, prawns, squid, 
vegetables, sugar, salt and water above.
They 
will also be exempted from paying GST on critical services such as 
public transport, toll, taxis, hospital and healthcare, schools, 
residential property, land for agriculture use, and financial services. 
Thus, the lower income group will not be burdened by the GST.
“If
 you conduct a poll, two out of 10 people will not know that essentials 
will be tax-exempted or zero-rated. That is a worrying statistic to me,”
 says Wan.
As for other consumer items like clothes, shoes, 
non-essential food items and furniture, Malaysians have in fact already 
been paying tax without realising it, because sales tax (sometimes as 
high as 10%) has been embedded in the price of the goods.
The GST
 system, on the other hand, will make the taxing system more 
transparent. The consumer will know what he is paying a tax on and how 
much.
Under the GST regime, the sales tax and services tax that 
people have been paying all this while, will be removed and replaced 
with a one-time consumption tax the GST.
So, it is not a case of consumers paying tax twice for what they buy.
Malaysia
 is looking at a GST rate of about 4% which actually works out to be 
cheaper than the present 5% to 10% sales tax and 6% service tax.
Refunds
A
 significant difference too under the GST regime is that the 
manufacturer, supplier and wholesaler get a refund from the Government 
on the GST (which in their case is an “input tax”) they have paid to buy
 raw materials, parts and utilities used, to produce their goods. So, it
 is the end user or customer who pays the 4% GST.
When 
manufacturers, wholesalers, suppliers get a refund on their input tax, 
it is good for business because it brings their production costs down. 
And when their costs are reduced, they can sell their products at a 
cheaper price to their customers.
At the customer level, since 
one has already been paying an embedded tax (of 5% to 10%) on many items
 prior to the GST, prices should not vary much.
As the GST covers
 a wider range of products (including those previously without a sales 
and service tax), some prices will go up but others will come down. But 
the important thing to bear in mind is that essential food items and key
 services will not be affected.
Wan says the Finance Ministry and Customs department have done years of extensive work on the GST.
They
 have come up with a Shopper's Guide, a list of 350 items in the CPI 
basket showing the estimated prices after the GST is implemented and the
 percentage of increase and decrease for each of these items, and shared
 this list with a number of trade associations including the Federation 
of Malaysian Manufacturers and the Chartered Tax Institute of Malaysia 
(CTMB).
“It astounds me that the list is not made available to 
the public. People want to know if their cup of coffee or roti canai 
will go up,” he says, adding that people need time to become aware of, 
accept and prepare for the GST.
Australia, he notes, took a year to prepare the public, explaining how the GST works and addressing concerns.
“If you release the list and information to the public only about three months before the implementation date, that's madness.”
Because
 the price of some non-essential goods might be higher, Wan suggests 
that the Government consider identifying the lower income group and 
offering them a one-off BRIM-like direct financial assistance to help 
them cope with the GST.
“Thus, the Government gives them support to deal with the GST but leaves it to them to decide how to spend that money.”
Dr Veerinderjeet Singh, chairman of Tax and 
Malaysia Sdn Bhd
 and former president of CTMB, believes that because Malaysia already 
has a sales tax embedded in the price of goods, it should be easier for 
people here to accept the GST than a country that never had similar 
taxes.
“People never really understood the objective and as a 
result, some sections are not for it. The GST is good for a country and 
this has been proven worldwide. We already have a sales and service tax;
 what we are doing is to merge and tweak it into the GST which is a more
 effective tax system,” he says, adding that the Government has done 
five years of solid work on the GST and spoken to every association. 
Now, they only need to go down to the ground to speak to the 
man-in-the-street.
Should manufacturers, suppliers or traders try
 to profiteer from the GST by not passing on their cost savings to the 
customers, action can be taken under the Price Control and 
Anti-profiteering Act that has been in place since April last year. 
Enforcement comes under the Domestic Trade and Consumer Ministry which 
is looking into establishing a price monitoring council to combat 
profiteering.
Dr Veerinderjeet points out that with the GST 
regime, there are more checks and balances in place as manufacturers, 
suppliers and wholesalers have to get their documents in order to claim 
their refunds on their GST (input tax).
He says it would also 
help uncover the underground economy because these businesses would now 
have to be registered to recover their input tax. And when they register
 their businesses, they will have to pay income tax, thus the government
 gains by collecting more taxes.
Wan notes that in the past, when
 the country's economy was growing at 7% to 9% annually and Foreign 
Direct Investment (FDIs) were coming in at a healthy rate, the 
Government did not worry too much about revenue because “the growth in 
the economy generated income that took care of things.”
“But 
remember 1997 and 1998 when corporate profits plummeted and PNLs 
(profits and losses) turned red? Where does the Government get its money
 from then?
“That's why the GST as a tax is a much better source 
for the Government. Regardless of whether there is an economic boom or 
recession, the GST can ensure a steady revenue to the Government .”
Wan
 suggests that people take a macro view of the economy, given the fact 
that the country has had a budget deficit for 16 consecutive years.
“People
 should not underestimate the impact of a budget deficit. If the 
government is spending more than it earns in revenue, a direct impact is
 that the value of the Malaysian ringgit will fall. What happens if that
 happens? We import inflation. A falling ringgit has greater far 
reaching implications on the overall economy and recession than the GST 
will ever have.
“The GST, on its own, is not going to be the 
silver bullet that cures deficit but it is definitely one of the 
strategies to help balance the books,” he says, adding that Malaysia 
should also tighten its subsidies and do something about its bloated 
civil service because a country as wealthy as it is should not slide 
down the slippery slope of the likes of Greece and Spain.
Dr 
Veerinderjeet admits that the one per cent cut in personal income tax 
rate took him by surprise and he feels it has been “overly-generous”.
“It
 benefits everybody in the taxable threshold, including the higher 
income group. People will save RM25 to RM475 in taxes. It is a good 
measure because it reduces liability and puts more money in your pocket.
 But I would have preferred for it to be held back for a rainy day,” he 
adds.
Currently, the maximum corporate tax in Malaysia is 25% but
 for personal income tax, the maximum is 26% which is something odd, 
given that individuals now pay a higher tax rate than companies.
Dr Veerinderjeet says it wasn't like that years ago.
“Personal
 taxes have always lagged behind corporate taxes. But countries have 
been lowering corporate tax rates over the years (to stay competitive) 
and we too have lowered ours.
“Many of us, including professional
 bodies, have been lobbying for the top margin tax rate for personal 
income tax to be aligned with corporate tax rate of 25%,” he shares, 
adding that the income tax bands too should be widened so that someone 
who works hard and earns an additional RM10,000 to RM15,000 a year will 
not find himself pushed up into a higher tax rate bracket.
Tax system
Dr
 Veerinderjeet favours a revamp of the entire tax system, including 
personal income tax, corporate tax, petroleum tax, real property gains 
tax, customs duties, sales tax, service tax, the GST and fixing the 
anomalies and income tax laws that may be burdening business and 
introducing incentives that encourage innovation and business while 
reviewing those that have not achieved their objectives.
“It is 
not as simple as introducing the GST, then think of lowering personal 
and corporate tax rates. Is this system sustainable for the future? We 
are looking at 2020 who are we benchmarking ourselves against in terms 
of our tax system? Are we benchmarking against a developed nation?”
On
 views that the GST should be deferred to give back to the rakyat, Dr 
Veerinderjeet says Malaysia needs far more development and it needs to 
fund this development.
“We are giving back to the rakyat in different forms like better roads, better schools and better hospitals,” he says.
With
 146 countries already implementing the GST, it is perhaps only a matter
 of time before the Government here follows suit. But for this, they 
must really go down to the ground to allay the fears, address the 
concerns and explain to the people why GST is the way to go.
Consumers assured of a fairer tax system
“YOU know that shirt you are wearing? You've paid tax on it,” Customs Department director-general 
Datuk Khazali Ahmad points out during a recent interview on the proposed Goods and Services Tax (GST).
What
 people do not realise, he adds, is that the Customs Department has been
 collecting sales and service taxes over the years. This is because the 
taxes have already been included in the prices consumers pay at the 
check-out counters.
And the amount collected is significant. Just
 take this year alone, till Oct 4 even without the GST the Customs 
Department has already collected RM7.3bil in sales tax and another 
RM4.36 bil in services tax.
Last year, it took in RM8.57bil in 
sales tax and services tax came up to RM4.98bil. In 2010, its collection
 for sales tax was RM8.17bil and RM3.92bil for services tax.
“Some
 people are not happy with the GST because they think the Government is 
introducing a new tax to add to the tax that is already in place.
“But
 the GST is not a new tax. The GST is only a replacement tax (to replace
 the sales and services tax) to make our taxing system more efficient 
and transparent,” says Khazali.
He understands the people's fears
 that the GST will affect prices of goods, services and their 
consumption pattern. But these fears are unfounded, he says.
“There
 is a zero tax on a lot of basic necessities (see chart) and we are 
giving exemptions on critical services (schools, hospitals, public 
transport, tolls, banking),” he explains.
“Consumers should be better off as essential food like rice, vegetables, cooking oil and fish are not subject to GST at all.”
Currently,
 the people are already paying a sales tax of 5% to10% and services tax 
of 6% on goods and services. With a proposed 4% GST rate, prices of 
these goods and services would in fact, be down.
He says this is 
because suppliers and manufacturer get a refund on what they pay as GST 
to produce their goods; so with the GST regime, they would now have to 
remove these elements from their cost.
“We have gone around to 
meet the suppliers to make sure that whatever cost savings they get 
(from their refund), will be passed on to the clients and consumers. We 
will ensure the public do not pay more when the GST is introduced.”
However,
 for certain goods and services that are now not subject to any sales or
 service taxes, there might be an increase in price with the GST but the
 rate should not be more than the GST proposed rate.
Khazali says
 the Customs Department will work closely with the Finance Ministry, 
Domestic Trade, Co-operative and Consumer Ministry and consumer 
associations to monitor prices and release a shoppers' guide to the 
rakyat so that they know how much they should be paying.
They will also get hypermarkets to co-operate and be the price-setters.
By SHAHANAAZ HABIB, The Star/Asia News Network
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