Chamber wants new tax laws
The Phnom Penh Post 16-08-2013: The
private sector has called on the government to review Cambodia’s taxation law,
a statute that business leaders say is outdated and needs to change if Cambodia
wants to continue to attract foreign investment.
Led
by Cambodia Chamber of Commerce (CCC) president Kith Meng, a delegation of more
than 100 business people met with Kong Vibol, secretary of state for the
Ministry of Economy and Finance, at the CCC headquarters in Phnom Penh
yesterday. They encouraged a review of the Law on Taxation passed in the late
1990s, which Meng said did not match the current needs of the Cambodian
economy.
“Let
me tell His Excellency, this law was created 15 years ago as I know, and this
law was made referring to the situation of the time,” Meng said, adding that
tax laws had not kept pace with the economic conditions of today.
Meng
said that with the onset of the ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) in 2015, when
trade barriers across the region are relaxed and competition for foreign
investment intensifies, Cambodia needs more than ever to remain attractive for
investors.
Although
details were not discussed at these initial talks, the draft agenda called for
a lowering of the value-added tax (VAT) from 10 per cent to seven per cent, in
line with other ASEAN members. Thailand’s VAT, for example, is 7 per cent.
The
National Assembly adopted the Law on Taxation in January 1997.
Meng
used Hong Kong as one system to possibly emulate. There, he said, tax rates are
low, but the government is able to collect dues effectively.
“Taking
small tax, [they] collect more; taking big taxes, [they] escape a lot,” he
said, suggesting that businesses would be less likely to look for avenues to
avoid paying taxes if they were considered more reasonable.
Vibol
said he was willing to consider the forum’s recommendations.
“I
won’t kick out this proposal. I will take it to a higher level now that the
business community has proposed this, and consider whether the ministry will
lower,” Vibol told the meeting.
“I
see the private sector playing a very crucial role in the economic development.
I highly value the private sector as the state partner,” he said.
Tax
revenue grew about 20 per cent in the first half of this year compared with the
same period in 2012, but economists and opposition leaders have cast doubt on
the figures.
Critics
also say that revenues could be higher if tax collection was more aggressive.
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