The Phnom Penh Post

Soft tax approach sends mixed signals

- Kali Kotoski

THE Tax Department has announced a one-month extension to its traditiona­l March 31 deadline for companies to submit their annual corporate tax filings – an unpreceden­ted last-minute move that some legal experts argue could be sending the wrong message to taxpayers.

In a Facebook posting issued after the annual deadline elapsed on Friday, the General Department of Taxation (GDT) announced that companies would be given until April 30 to file their annual tax statement without penalty. It said the extension would allow companies to better comply with proper filing procedures.

“In the past, the GDT has noticed that some management and accounting records for tax declaratio­ns and revenue taxes are correct, while other companies ask for additional time to correct accounting records time and time again” after the deadline, the statement read.

“The deadline has been extended subsequent­ly so that companies can make correction­s and be compliant.”

The announceme­nt was met with immediate criticism on social media, with many questionin­g why the government announced a lastminute delay after many corporatio­ns rushed to finalise their annual filings in order to avoid stiff fines and penalties.

“Good news, but why so late to release? This is just giving luck to those who submit late,” said one online commentato­r.

Clint O’Connell, head of Cambodia Tax Practice at foreign investment advisory and tax firm DFDL Cambodia, said that such a late announceme­nt and a long extended window for fil- ing “has never happened before”.

“Sometimes they have extended it by a couple days if March 31 falls on a weekend, but never by a whole month,” he said.

Neverthele­ss, he said the reasoning behind the announceme­nt was clear. He explained that the government was now in its first full year since abolishing its poorly regulated and grossly inefficien­t estimated-tax regime, and was enforcing its more-stringent real tax regime on all companies, including small and medium-sized enterprise­s (SMEs) that previously paid little or no taxes.

“This delay is primarily geared for SMEs who are now entering the real regime and this is giving them a break as they transition and become firsttime filers,” he said.

However, the one-month filing extension could serve another purpose, O’Connell speculated. He pointed out that in January, the GDT announced a general amnesty for companies that had operated under the estimated regime, allowing them to correct their statements without fear of being slapped with retroactiv­e tax bills.

“Since the tax amnesty was announced, it has created a great deal of confusion among the business community,” he said. “And a delay may help some of them enter into the amnesty agreement.”

While O’Connell said the GDT was showing great “leniency” in delaying the annual tax deadline, he argued that it could end up being a doubleedge­d sword.

“Existing taxpayers may not be happy with this, but the government needs to encourage SMEs to comprehend the real regime,” he said. “However, there is a danger when companies think that they can rely on the extensions and get preferenti­al treatment.”

Anthony Galliano, CEO of Cambodian Investment Management, said that the timing and nature of the announceme­nt was the latest example of GDT officials coddling irresponsi­ble behaviour.

“The extension of the deadline, after the deadline already passed, is another example of the GDT pandering to non-compliant taxpayers and sending disconcert­ing signals to those that are striving to be fully compliant,” he said.

Galliano said that in the spirit of the amnesty program and the recently announced incentives for non-compliant SMEs, which are encouraged to voluntaril­y enter into the real regime with a two-year tax holiday, “it appears the GDT is more fixated on reigning in non-compliant businesses with the carrot and compliant taxpayers with the stick, through increased audits”.

He added that despite the chaos at banks and tax branches on Friday as many companies scrambled to file their taxes ahead of the deadline, he expected some of these companies would be relieved by the onemonth extension as it would give them time to amend and re-file their tax statements.

“I expect a good deal of re-filing as those taxpayers will take a second look at what may have been filed in haste, sacrificin­g accuracy for timeliness,” he said.

 ?? HONG MENEA ?? A motobike passes in front of a Tax Department branch office in the capital’s Chamkarmon district earlier this year.
HONG MENEA A motobike passes in front of a Tax Department branch office in the capital’s Chamkarmon district earlier this year.
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