The Star Malaysia

Guan Eng debunks notion that tax imposed under SST will be higher

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PETALING JAYA: The re-introducti­on of the Sales and Service Tax (SST) – a 10% tax on sale of goods and a 6% tax on services – does not mean that the tax imposed will be at 16%, the Finance Minister said.

Lim Guan Eng said it would be comparing apples with oranges by simply adding up the SST and comparing it to the 6% Goods and Services Tax (GST).

In a statement, he explained that the sales tax, at a rate of 5% and 10%, applies to selected manufactur­ed and imported products, and not all products unlike the GST.

“The 6% service tax applies to selected services and not all services, unlike the GST. The sales tax is imposed on manufactur­ers’ and importers’ price, while the GST is imposed on the final consumer price. Hence it is wrong to claim that a 10% sales tax is higher than a 6% GST,” he said.

Using a can of soft drink as example, Lim said a manufactur­er imposes a 10% sales tax (RM0.10) on the product manufactur­ed for RM1.

Under the GST system, when the same can is sold at a 7-Eleven for RM2, a GST of RM0.12 would have been imposed, he said.

“It is clear that a 6% GST at RM0.12 would be higher than a 10% SST.”

Lim’s statement was issued to refute claims that SST would burden the people more compared to GST. He said the SST, to be implemente­d on Sept 1, would in fact “return” RM23bil to the rakyat with its projected collection of RM21bil a year, compared to the projected RM44bil from GST.

At the Parliament, former prime minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak slammed the Government’s decision to re-introduce the SST.

Lim added that his ministry had undertaken a comprehens­ive SST review exercise with the assistance of tax consultant­s from accounting firm Pricewater­house Coopers (PwC).

He said PwC would help rationalis­e tax collection and reporting requiremen­ts to ensure that the SST would be even more efficient and less bureaucrat­ic than the GST, or even the old SST system.

“PwC will ensure the SST imposed on Sept 1 will be simpler, less cumbersome and will prevent leakages and loopholes.

“Unlike the GST, which burdens the poor proportion­ately more, the new SST will also be tweaked and designed to ensure that the impact on the lower income groups will be proportion­ately less,” he said.

The sales tax is imposed on manufactur­ers’ and importers’ price, while the GST is imposed on the final consumer price. Lim Guan Eng

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