Bangkok Post

Analysts expect Singapore to raise GST

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SINGAPORE: Singapore, a city-state famed for the low-tax model that helped transform it from a gritty port town to an Asian Manhattan, is expected to put something unusual in this year’s government budget announceme­nt: a tax hike.

Nine of 10 economists polled by Reuters think authoritie­s will on Monday unveil the first rise in the goods and services tax (GST) since 2007. Policymake­rs have flagged the need to increase revenue to meet future social spending needs of a rapidly ageing population.

Economists say Finance Minister Heng Swee Keat might also make tweaks to taxes on e-commerce retailers such as Amazon. com Inc, wealth and sugar when he presents the budget on Monday, for the year starting April 1.

Any tax measures would come after Singapore in 2017 had its fastest economic growth in three years, estimated at 3.5%.

“Strong economic growth is a good pull factor supporting the tax hike,” said Francis Tan, an economist for Singapore’s United Overseas Bank.

He expects GST to be increased by one percentage point this year to 8%, followed by another one percentage point hike next year.

Tan added that there was an “urgent need” to shift more towards indirect taxes as the tax base for personal income tax could become smaller over the longer term given Singapore’s demographi­c challenge.

While the rate for Singapore’s consumptio­n tax is one of the world’s lowest, GST is still the government’s second largest source of tax revenue, behind corporate tax.

Singapore introduced its GST in 1994, with a 3% rate. This was raised to 4% in 2003 and 5% in 2004, then to 7% in 2007.

Some economists including HSBC’s Jingyang Chen, who expects a two percentage point hike, said a higher GST could be accompanie­d by measures to ease the burden for lower-income families, such as cash transfers and vouchers.

Eight of the 10 economists polled expect the government to widen the net on e-commerce transactio­ns subject to the GST.

Currently, Singapore consumers pay 7% GST on their purchases from Singaporeb­ased online retailers. In contrast, they pay no GST on goods purchased from overseas suppliers if the value of the imported goods is below S$400 (US$302.40).

Several economists also suggested there could additional taxes on wealth, such as an increase in annual property taxes, as well as higher rates on alcohol and tobacco products or even a new tax on sugar consumptio­n.

Michael Wan, an economist at Credit Suisse, estimates that a two percentage point increase to the GST would add around 0.6% of GDP to net government revenues annually.

Economists estimate a two percentage point rise in GST could boost Singapore’s headline inflation rate by 1.0-1.5 percentage points and core inflation — the measure closely watched by policymake­rs — by even more.

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