Jump to content

Thai Tax Strategy Revamp: VAT Hike, Income Tax Cuts Proposed


Recommended Posts

Posted
15 hours ago, lordgrinz said:

So, tax the poor and middle-class more, and tax the Elite less.....I wonder who thought this up.

Perhaps Tony?

Posted
2 minutes ago, Phillip9 said:

 

ONLY???  16% make the US by far the largest export market.  Second place is China at 12%.

True, but 75% of Thai exports are to regional and Asia/Pac countries with only 25% to Western countries. So a potential loss of a single large trading partner, whilst painful, is not catastrophic. And let us not forget, China is not fully back on line yet.

 

https://oec.world/en/profile/country/tha

  • Confused 2
Posted
16 hours ago, Dmaxdan said:

Interesting. Perhaps they have finally realized that the new tax laws are potentially going to scare away wealthy foreigners. 

This change in personal income tax is to attract WORKERS to earn a salary here.  Under the LTR wealthy workers already have that lower income tax (they get a work permit through the BOI too. AND, remember they have been talking about different tax scheme for many months now and this is just another one to throw into the mixture.  This didn't seem to say anything about remitted funds or worldwide income taxation.

Posted
6 minutes ago, Presnock said:

This change in personal income tax is to attract WORKERS to earn a salary here.  Under the LTR wealthy workers already have that lower income tax (they get a work permit through the BOI too. AND, remember they have been talking about different tax scheme for many months now and this is just another one to throw into the mixture.  This didn't seem to say anything about remitted funds or worldwide income taxation.

I expect the new remittance rule announced a year ago will be in addition to the suggested changes to VAT. There's a wide array of tax classes and types so potentially they can adjust many of them at the same time. I don't think anyone should get excited and think that changes to VAT might negate changes to foreign remittances, I don't believe it will.

  • Agree 2
Posted
1 minute ago, Phillip9 said:

A 16% decline in exports would certainly be a catastrophe.  That would be about a 10% decline in total GDP.  That would be  worse than if all tourism ended in Thailand.  So even worse than covid.

 

 

 

Except loss of exports resulting from US tariffs wouldn't happen in one fell swoop overnight. They would more likely happen over time and would not extend to the entire export destination. During that time, new markets would be developed, perhaps not to the full extent of the loss but the point is, it's not an instantaneous drop or loss that is total.

  • Agree 1
Posted
17 hours ago, KimchiCurry said:

Why not increase VAT depending on the products (electronics, foods, etc...).

 

Yes, that makes more sense. Many countries have itemised what groups of items require VAT and what goods and services are exempt. Thailand already does this I think (no VAT/GST on food at supermarkets? Just other goods like cleaning liquids, etc.?)

Posted
19 hours ago, KimchiCurry said:

15%  flat tax is pretty good for personal income. Increasing VAT will damage the low class though. Why not increase VAT depending on the products (electronics, foods, etc...).

The increase of VAT from 7% to 10% must bring a <deleted> ton of money to be able to balance the decrease of corporate and personal income tax.

 

Lets not assume that the tax allowances remain the same or even continue to exist under this new system.

 

A true flat tax is across the board on all income.

Why have they been attempting to get all the street vendors into the tax system in Bangkok?

 

I think we now know why.

  • Like 1
  • Agree 1
Posted

If they raised the VAT to 10 or especially 15....They would have more money rolling in than they know what to do with....

 

I think they are wising up to the fact that every single farang in Thailand will be doing every possible thing in their power to make sure they dont pay a single baht in taxes....EVER....

 

The VAT is the great equalizer.....Everybody pays that every day.....No exceptions.....

  • Like 1
  • Sad 1
Posted
On 12/4/2024 at 2:58 PM, lordgrinz said:

So, tax the poor and middle-class more, and tax the Elite less.....I wonder who thought this up.

 

A filthy rich person?

  • Like 1
Posted
10 hours ago, redwood1 said:

The VAT is the great equalizer.....Everybody pays that every day.....No exceptions.....

 

Except increasing VAT increases the debt load on the poor and unfairly benefits the wealthy who can more easily afford it. And in case you missed it, Thailand's population comprises mostly poor people who don't earn enough money to even file a  tax return. So no, it is not a great equalizer, it is very one sided, 

  • Confused 1
  • Agree 2
Posted
On 12/4/2024 at 7:19 PM, snoop1130 said:

The backdrop to this strategy includes the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development's new guidelines urging a 15% minimum corporate tax. Thailand's existing corporate rate stands at 20%, but a proposed cut to 15% is on the table to remain globally competitive. Speaking at the Sustainability Forum 2025, Pichai highlighted the necessity for these adjustments in light of international tax trends and workforce mobility challenges.

So drop the income tax for the rich and increase VAT which hits the poor.

  • Like 1
  • Agree 1
Posted
18 hours ago, chiang mai said:

I doubt seriously that Thailand is concerned about US import tariffs, the US is only around 16% of Thai exports.

It might be only 16% but in money it is over 49 billion US$ (2022).

  • Agree 1
Posted
10 minutes ago, Muhendis said:

It might be only 16% but in money it is over 49 billion US$ (2022).

Numerically that is correct, practically speaking it's not especially relevant.

 

Thailand is not reliant on the West and certainly not on the US for its export markets, 75% are in the Far East and Asia. Each of the individual markets increase and decrease their share in response to national or global economic events, the latter being far more dangerous because is causes losses on many markets simultaneously. Any losses in one market are more reductions rather than losses and take time to take effect, it is almost impossible to think those losses would affect all of Thailand's exports to that country since many such as foodstuffs are critical to individual nations, just as essential components are critical to the importing nations own economy.

Posted
10 minutes ago, Rolo89 said:

The idea that Thailand isn't reliant on the West is crazy.

 

Direct export to the west is huge with the US being the biggest partner by far, indirect export stuff like circuits that are used by China, Japan etc to then export to the west is also huge.

 

Screenshot2024-12-06at08_43_01.thumb.png.bcde69daf851aa9fb517e3edb380552a.png

https://oec.world/en/profile/country/tha

Exports to the US total USD 48.5 bill.,

total exports to the West circa USD 80 bill.

Total exports to the rest of the world USD 312 -80

or 75%

 

Thailand Exports By Country

Value Year
United States $48.48B 2023
China $34.17B 2023
Japan $24.59B 2023
Australia $12.21B 2023
Malaysia $11.97B 2023
Vietnam $11.22B 2023
Hong Kong $11.10B 2023
Singapore $10.24B 2023
India $10.12B 2023
Indonesia $10.09B 2023
Philippines $7.98B 2023
Cambodia $6.45B 2023
South Korea $6.07B 2023
Netherlands $5.84B 2023
Laos $4.64B 2023
Germany $4.56B 2023
Myanmar $4.41B 2023
United Kingdom $4.08B 2023
Switzerland $4.04B 2023
Mexico $3.70B 2023
South Africa $3.53B 2023
United Arab Emirates $3.31B 2023
Saudi Arabia $2.73B 2023
Italy $2.10B 2023
France $1.98B 2023
Canada $1.90B 2023
Brazil $1.82B 2023
Belgium $1.67B 2023
Turkey $1.54B 2023
Argentina $1.54B 2023
New Zealand $1.41B 2023
Bangladesh $1.14B 2023
Iraq $901.35M 2023
Spain $867.57M 2023
Pakistan $854.41M 2023
Russia $820.83M 2023
Czech Republic $787.48M 2023
Israel $784.06M 2023
Egypt $667.91M 2023
Poland $596.97M 2023
Sweden $527.65M 2023
Hungary $517.53M 2023
Ireland $496.83M 2023
Chile $477.18M 2023
Kuwait $452.83M 2023
Oman $443.55M 2023
Denmark $361.20M 2023
Norway $343.52M 2023
Qatar $327.48M 2023
Peru $296.84M 2023
Sri Lanka $290.87M 2023
Romania $276.49M 2023
Ecuador $265.34M 2023
Libya $260.64M 2023
Senegal $238.03M 2023
Austria $225.26M 2023
Yemen $225.25M 2023
Portugal $215.73M 2023
Slovakia $212.76M 2023
Colombia $204.56M 2023
Jordan $204.30M 2023
Nigeria $201.68M 2023
Guatemala $196.92M 2023
Kenya $194.05M 2023
Mozambique $181.87M 2023
Papua New Guinea $177.98M 2023
Panama $175.11M 2023
Bahrain $168.14M 2023
Ivory Coast $161.53M 2023
Tanzania $157.77M 2023
Lebanon $150.81M 2023
Honduras $149.12M 2023
Finland $143.20M 2023
Greece $138.31M 2023
Iran $135.09M 2023
Costa Rica $132.92M 2023
Cameroon $130.66M 2023
Slovenia $119.58M 2023
Dominican Republic $113.18M 2023
Ghana $112.74M 2023
Bulgaria $111.33M 2023
Trinidad And Tobago $111.05M 2023
Morocco $107.09M 2023
Algeria $104.01M 2023
Angola $102.88M 2023
Lithuania $98.26M 2023
Brunei $97.68M 2023
Uzbekistan $96.80M 2023
El Salvador $92.56M 2023
Jamaica $92.02M 2023
Maldives $85.26M 2023
Tunisia $84.86M 2023
Mauritius $80.31M 2023
Kazakhstan $76.14M 2023
Fiji $75.61M 2023
Benin $74.44M 2023
Georgia $57.62M 2023
Togo $54.86M 2023
Zimbabwe $53.48M 2023
Nicaragua $51.03M 2023
Macau $49.50M 2023
New Caledonia $47.93M 2023
Nepal $45.89M 2023
Congo $45.60M 2023
Ukraine $41.71M 2023
Namibia $40.60M 2023
East Timor $39.68M 2023
Bolivia $39.14M 2023
Ethiopia $38.01M 2023
Serbia $37.47M 2023
Suriname $34.17M 2023
Paraguay $34.13M 2023
Cyprus $34.11M 2023
Estonia $33.59M 2023
Uruguay $33.54M 2023
French Polynesia $29.70M 2023
Uganda $29.35M 2023
Latvia $27.82M 2023
Guyana $26.61M 2023
Venezuela $26.57M 2023
Syria $26.43M 2023
Seychelles $26.38M 2023
Republic of the Congo $26.17M 2023
Malta $25.18M 2023
Marshall Islands $24.62M 2023
Madagascar $24.02M 2023
Croatia $24.01M 2023
Djibouti $23.76M 2023
Armenia $23.74M 2023
Sudan $23.05M 2023
Barbados $22.36M 2023
Gabon $21.93M 2023
Somalia $21.37M 2023
Mongolia $21.14M 2023
Guinea $20.46M 2023
Mali $20.13M 2023
Bhutan $18.71M 2023
Macedonia $18.60M 2023
Vanuatu $17.25M 2023
Solomon Islands $15.12M 2023
Belarus $14.10M 2023
Bosnia And Herzegovina $13.18M 2023
Azerbaijan $12.68M 2023
Mauritania $11.72M 2023
Zambia $11.10M 2023
Samoa $11.01M 2023
Afghanistan $10.54M 2023
Gambia $10.53M 2023
Burkina Faso $9.84M 2023
Sierra Leone $9.21M 2023
Antigua and Barbuda $9.05M 2023
Albania $8.86M 2023
Aruba $8.58M 2023
Bahamas $8.37M 2023
Equatorial Guinea $8.29M 2023
Luxembourg $8.03M 2023
Cayman Islands $7.73M 2023
Liberia $7.32M 2023
South Sudan $7.26M 2023
Iceland $6.92M 2023
Cape Verde $6.50M 2023
Chad $6.07M 2023
Malawi $5.84M 2023
Grenada $5.84M 2023
Kiribati $5.67M 2023
Niger $5.15M 2023
Kyrgyzstan $4.87M 2023
Cuba $4.15M 2023
Haiti $4.00M 2023
Dominica $3.91M 2023
St Kitts and Nevis $3.82M 2023
Turkmenistan $3.24M 2023
Tajikistan $3.12M 2023
Bermuda $2.88M 2023
Palestine $2.76M 2023
Tonga $2.71M 2023
Rwanda $2.42M 2023
Montenegro $2.41M 2023
Botswana $1.88M 2023
Palau $1.84M 2023
Northern Mariana Islands $1.80M 2023
Central African Republic $1.79M 2023
Burundi $1.69M 2023
Belize $1.65M 2023
Lesotho $1.55M 2023
Guinea Bissau $1.18M 2023
Moldova $1.07M 2023
St Vincent and the Grenadines $1.04M 2023
Comoros $738.49K 2023
Swaziland $661.61K 2023
Greenland $487.86K 2023
Sao Tome And Principe $273.29K 2023
Andorra $272.27K 2023
Eritrea $221.12K 2023
San Marino $66.52K 2023
Faroe Islands $30.90K 2023
North Korea $1.38K 2023
Guam $7.95M 2021
American Samoa $1.98M 2021
Mayotte $14.65M 2013
Netherlands Antilles $12.29M 2010

 

 

https://tradingeconomics.com/thailand/exports-by-country

  • Thanks 1
Posted
22 hours ago, paddypower said:

Borrocks......I just went to Makro yesterday and discovered that the import duty on wine had been reduced, resulting in a approx. 10%  decrease the retail prices (of wine, anyway). 

 

Really, i have not noticed any deduction in wine prices. But it is difficult to know as every wine bottle has a different price.

Posted
35 minutes ago, Ben Zioner said:

Nonsense, right now the Elite doesn't pay anything,  the poor pay only the 7% VAT while the middled income earners are squeezed by a ridiculously steep tax scale. 

 

I see this as faiir and effective. Fair in that everyone must contribute and effective by widening the tax base to those who remain under the RD's radar.

Agreed. Increasing indirect taxes like VAT is an easy, cheap and quick way to fix the inefficient tax collection system forcing the wealthiest and other non-complying folks to contribute more in absolute.

 

People are used to deal with constant price increases in Thailand, be it due to high inflation or tax, result is the same for them.

  • Confused 1
  • Agree 2
Posted

I think the issue is affordability. The wealthy can afford any increase in VAT, the poor cannot. No Revenue department would knowingly increase income tax on the poorest in society  yet this is effectively what is being proposed. If anything, the move should be towards increasing taxes on the most wealthy, something that many countries are actively considering.

  • Confused 2
  • Agree 1
Posted

Like most goverments they give with one hand and rob you with the other one. 

Thaksin's populist vote grabbing schemes are a disaster for the economy. 

Raising vat to 10% would hurt the poorest in society but would keep the money trough topped up for greedy politicians. 

 

  • Thanks 1
  • Agree 1
Posted

Now that makes sense. Bring taxation down to normal levels and you will have much less "tax planning" and outright cheaters to hunt after. 35% income tax is ridiculous compared to what the state offers those pristine tax payers in return; 20% corporate taxation is also more than border line. 

This will also do away with the planned (over-)taxation of non-Thais. There the mathematics are even simpler. A non-Thai has a pension of, say, THB 40'000/month. If the state takes away 15% (THB 6,000) it means, that this person spends only THB 34,000 and not THB 40,000 into the SME industry of Thailand (food, drinks, rent, entertainment, transport etc.) - in essence the state cuts into the earnings and profitability of the Thai SME. 

VAT depends on consumption; those consuming more = pay more money whereas the percentage is linear and not progressive. In addition, the VAT system is in place and works (mostly; the convenience stores of Somchai and Yodsak remain excluded but pay at least in-put VAT). 

If this goes through, then Thailand inched itself closer to the 21st century indeed! Carpe diem! 

  • Confused 1
  • Thumbs Up 1
  • Thanks 1
Posted
1 hour ago, NoDisplayName said:

 

The most wealthy don't pay income tax.

 

They keep their ill-gotten booty offshore, in coded accounts, under family trusts, with multiple ways of remitting funds as needed with minimal taxes.

 

It's the mildly wealthy supporters of the most wealthy that will benefit from lower income tax rates.

Conjecture, supposition, guesswork and popular myth, nothing more. I suggest that the truly wealthy pay tax because they can afford to. There is ample evidence that wealthy people and very wealthy people pay their share of tax or at least pay large amounts.

  • Confused 1
  • Thumbs Up 1
Posted
On 12/5/2024 at 9:31 AM, chiang mai said:

Household or consumer debt is high but government or public debt is low, compared to many countries, less than 60% of GDP.

 

The idea behind closing tax loopholes is to make sure wealthy Thai's who evade tax offshore, pay their fair share, foreigners just got caught up in closing that loophole.

My take on it, maybe right, maybe wrong, is that they wanted to go after the Thais offshore but included Foreigners so they could not be accused of being racist to Thais. It would be easy to exempt foreigners.

  • Like 1
  • Agree 1

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.




×
×
  • Create New...