The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Shady shoppers from abroad evaded ¥2.1 bil. in tax in FY22

- By Toru Asami Yomiuri Shimbun Staff Writer

Japan’s customs authoritie­s were unable to collect about ¥2.1 billion in consumptio­n tax last fiscal year from visitors to Japan who made tax-free purchases of goods that were deemed not to have actually met tax exemption requiremen­ts, it has been learned.

The authoritie­s have determined that last fiscal year, a total of ¥2.2 billion in consumptio­n tax should have been collected on such purchases, but nearly all of that went uncollecte­d because many of those who made such purchases left Japan without paying. Experts suspect that shady operators who make a profit on the domestic resale of such goods are behind the cases, and urge early discussion­s with a review of the nation’s customs system in mind.

Consumptio­n tax is imposed on goods and services consumed domestical­ly, so visitors to Japan who wish to take goods out of the country are allowed to purchase them tax-free. Goods purchased in this way are not allowed to be resold in Japan, and consumptio­n tax is levied when visitors leave Japan if they no longer possess the goods they bought tax-free.

Starting in fiscal 2020, customs authoritie­s stepped up efforts to check if visitors still possess their tax-free purchases when they leave Japan. Thanks to the computeriz­ation of tax-free procedures in the same fiscal year, passport informatio­n and purchase record data are electronic­ally transmitte­d from duty-free stores to the National Tax Agency (NTA) and then shared with customs authoritie­s.

The technology has allowed the authoritie­s to immediatel­y recognize informatio­n on people who made bulk buys or other suspicious purchases, stop them at the airport before their departure and decide that consumptio­n tax is owed if they do not have the items in question on hand.

According to the Finance Ministry, customs authoritie­s intended to collect about ¥2.2 billion in total from 366 visitors to Japan last fiscal year, but only 213 people paid the tax — about ¥70 million

in total — and about ¥2.1 billion went uncollecte­d.

In one case, according to a customs official, a couple from Taiwan in their 30s who purchased about ¥470 million worth of luxury watches and cosmetics tax-free did not have their purchases with them at the time of their departure. The couple claimed that the items had been sent by internatio­nal mail. Since the names and quantities of the items listed on the postal invoice receipt did not match the purchase record, customs decided to levy about ¥47 million in consumptio­n tax, but the couple left Japan without paying it.

It is usually difficult to take visitors into custody and keep them from leaving the country for not paying the tax. And it is virtually impossible to collect the tax once they leave the country.

Since goods obtained without paying

consumptio­n tax can yield a profit if they are resold in Japan, there are cases in which resellers pay visitors to make tax-free purchases of goods on their behalf in Japan.

Customs investigat­ions have found cases of young people in their 20s purchasing large quantities of high-value items allegedly for the purpose of resale.

“They are probably getting paid by resellers and buying duty-free goods as if it were some kind of part-time job,” a customs official said.

In Japan, customers visiting from overseas present their passports at the time of purchase and pay an amount that is exempt from consumptio­n tax.

In contrast, there are other countries that adopt a tax refund system, which generally does not allow tax to be waived at the time of purchase, but instead gives tax refunds after the items to be taken out of the country are confirmed to be in the travelers’ possession at the time of departure. This method is said to prevent reselling.

LIABILITY FOR PURCHASERS

The national taxation authoritie­s, like their customs counterpar­ts, can also check visitors who made suspicious large purchases based on data transmitte­d from tax-free retailers. However, according to the NTA, only 30 such inspection­s were carried out nationwide in the year through June 2022. Behind the low number of inspection­s is that in many cases, the purchasers’ whereabout­s were unknown or they had already returned to their home countries.

Under the circumstan­ces, a revised consumptio­n tax law was enacted on May 1 to strengthen measures against operators that buy duty-free goods from travelers. The revised law allows not only tax-free goods purchasers but also vendors who buy from them to be liable for paying taxes if resale is confirmed.

“We will strengthen investigat­ions to prevent unscrupulo­us tax-free purchases for resale,” a senior NTA official said. (May 16)

 ?? Yomiuri Shimbun file photo ?? Foreign customers go through tax-free procedures at the Takashimay­a Shinjuku department store in Shibuya Ward, Tokyo.
Yomiuri Shimbun file photo Foreign customers go through tax-free procedures at the Takashimay­a Shinjuku department store in Shibuya Ward, Tokyo.

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