The Borneo Post

• Changing the landscape with digital tax

- By Rachel Lau rachellau@theborneop­ost.com

This is incorrect as it will only be imposed on services paid to the online company or in applicatio­n (app). Items under ecommerce have already been subjected to import duty and sales tax.

Leow Mui Lee, Axcelasia Raxand Sdn Bhd managing director

In a blink of an eye, Malaysia’s government has undergone a huge revamp since May 9, 2018 when our nation’s voters ended a 61-year old rule of the Barisan Nasional (BN) government by electing opposition party, Pakatan Harapan (PH), into power.

Since the momentous change, everyone has been bracing for many changes in the country including a digital tax that would mainly be focused on overseas service content providers.

And on November 2, the anticipati­on finally came to reality when Finance Minister Lim Guang Eng formally announced during the unveiling of the National Budget 2019, that foreign online service providers like entertainm­ent streaming platforms such as Netflix, Spotify and Steam will be subjected to service tax effective from Jan 1, 2020.

Clarifying on the new tax, tax advisory Axcelasia Raxand Sdn Bhd managing director Leow Mui Lee guided that the tax, which stirred some shock reaction initially among businesses and consumers, is not imposed on all online transactio­ns.

“This is incorrect as it will only be imposed on services paid to the online company or in applicatio­n (app). Items under e-commerce have already been subjected to import duty and sales tax.

“For example, the user downloads a game that needs an in app purchase. These are the items that fall under the digital tax,” she was reported saying according to Bernama.

This taxation of mostly business- to- consumer ( B2C) foreign entities is only the first tranche of the proposed digital tax as the government has further guided that they are waiting for the Organisati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t – along with more than 110 countries and jurisdicti­ons – to come up with an agreed approach towards taxing the digital economy by March 2020.

While there is fear over the upcoming second tranche of the digital tax with little details out so far, the proposed first tranche has at least been received fairly well from many local businesses and analysts out there.

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