Viet Nam News

Committee delayed voting on tax hike proposals

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HAØ NOÄI — The National Assembly (NA) Standing Committee postponed a vote on a proposal made by the Finance Ministry to hike the environmen­tal protection tax yesterday, urging serious considerat­ion of its economic impacts.

Presenting the bill, Minister of Finance Ñinh Tieán Duõng said that the current socio-economic situation made it necessary to adjust environmen­tal protection duties on a number of products to “better reflect the amount of pollution they caused and to fulfill Vieät Nam’s commitment­s to environmen­tal protection.”

Duõng claimed that the tax hike would bring in VNÑ15.2 trillion (US$657 million) to the State budget, which would be used for socio-economic developmen­t purposes, including environmen­tal protection projects.

The tax hike would promote “economic and efficient use of energy and natural resources, and production and consumptio­n of environmen­t-friendly commoditie­s,” Duõng said.

Regarding public concerns that prices would rise since petrol remained the primary fuel used in the country, Duõng said that the increase would only stretch the country’s 2018 Consumer Price Index (CPI) by a marginal 0.110.15 per cent.

However, several members of the committee urged serious considerat­ion of the proposed petrol tax hike, since CPI in the first six months of 2018 had increased by 3.29 per cent – already close to the NA’s ceiling target of 4 per cent for the whole year.

Raising tax on a ‘sensitive’ product such as petrol would upend business activities and public life, committee members added.

Similarly, the 100 per cent increase in tax on mazut, a heavy oil still widely used as fuel at production plants, was also likely to affect businesses.

“Just a month ago, the Prime Minister said the Government was committed to maintainin­g stable prices for public services and basic amenities such as electricit­y in the last half of 2018, and now the Government has proposed an increase to the environmen­tal tax, which in turn, would lead to an increase in the price of commoditie­s,” Nguyeãn Vaên Giaøu, chairman of the NA External Relations Committee, said at the meeting.

Nguyeãn Ñöùc Haûi, chairman of the Finance and Budget Committee, the body that reviewed the proposal, said that while the committee agreed with the bill’s intent, the Government must deliver a clearer report on its economic impacts and listen to feedback from experts and citizens, especially those most vulnerable to the tax hike.

NA Chairwoman Nguyeãn Thò Kim Ngaân said that “a marginal inflation rate would be worth it if the tax hike generates considerab­le funds to be used for environmen­tal protection projects.”

However, if the proposed hike went into effect, the Government must prioritise spending on environmen­tal works such as climate change adaptation, preventing landslides and flooding, and reforestat­ion programmes, she said.

In addition, she asked customs, tax and financial oversight authoritie­s to step up inspection­s and monitor actual oil production costs. — VNS

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