Jump to content

Thai retailers call for more tax breaks


Recommended Posts

Posted

TAX MEASURE
Retailers call for more tax breaks

SUCHAT SRITAMA
THE NATION

30276194-01_big.jpg
"It would be great if the government could extend this scheme to cover foreign tourists in order to encourage more spending while they stay in the country," Jariya Chirathivat, president of the TRA, said

BANGKOK: -- The government should continue endorsing tax breaks for consumers and open more duty-free shops to attract foreign tourists and boost the retail business, according to the Thai Retailers Association (TRA).

"The tax measure endorsed for the last seven days of last year has helped the whole retail sector to grow by 3.1 per cent in 2015, up from 2.8 per cent in an earlier forecast.

"It would be great if the government could extend this scheme to cover foreign tourists in order to encourage more spending while they stay in the country," Jariya Chirathivat, president of the TRA, said yesterday.

For domestic tourism, the government should continue the tax-deduction measure and implement it twice annually, in the first and second halves of the year. This would increase spending by local people, particularly for tourism, during the low and back-to-school seasons.

The government should allow more operators to open duty-free shops in major towns and tourist destinations. It is hoped this would reduce the prices of luxury products and other goods, and encourage tourists to spend more.

"The government should give the green light to more operators to run duty-free shops at major airports and in downtown areas. Currently, there is only one duty-free operator in Thailand.

"The government should support this by having pick-up counters at major airports for tourists buying duty-free products in downtown shops. This would benefit the tourism industry," Jariya said.

The average daily spending per visitor is about Bt5,000, he said. Nearly one-third of that, or about Bt1,400, is for shopping. However, the average tourist shopping expenditure in Thailand is half that in Singapore and a quarter of the outlay in Hong Kong.

"The problem is tourists don't come to Thailand mainly for shopping, because most luxury goods here are more expensive than in Singapore or Hong Kong," she said.

To strengthen the retail business in 2016, the TRA has offered more proposals to the government for consideration, including speeding up investment in infrastructure projects to create jobs and increase incomes.

Other ideas are imposing some measures to boost local consumption by focusing on middle-to-high-income earners, restoring shoppers' confidence, and putting consumers in a shopping mood by running some campaigns during the low season.

Reducing duties on luxury brand-name imports to attract more shopping from foreign tourists is also needed. According to the Global Blue survey for 2012-13, Thais were ranked sixth in claiming tax refunds on overseas shopping.

The TRA said the 2015 special tax break was one of the government's New Year gifts for Thais. All retailers and product makers are registered in the value-added-tax system.

The measure, which offered tax deductions of up to Bt15,000, augmented consumer purchasing power. Earlier, the government imposed another measure to allow deductions of up to Bt15,000 for individual taxpayers who bought hotel accommodations and other services from tourism operators. Both tax breaks will together allow individual taxpayers to deduct up to Bt30,000 on their personal income tax.

It was predicted that the shopping spree during the New Year celebrations rose 20 per cent or Bt25 billion and pumped Bt125 billion into the economy in the final month of 2015.

According to the World Bank, Thailand's tax collections should reach 21.35 per cent of gross domestic product, but only 16.02 per cent has been collected over the last few years.

A study of the tax structure found only 327,127 companies and partnerships registered with the corporate-income-tax system, or only 12 per cent of the 2.7 million entities registered with the Commerce Ministry's Business Development Department.

Source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/business/Retailers-call-for-more-tax-breaks-30276194.html

nationlogo.jpg
-- The Nation 2016-01-06

Posted

Yes, all well and good for the Thai retailers to advise what is good for the country when they are the ones profiteering very, very well from this government scheme.

What are these retailers doing to help the less fortunate people who can least afford?

Posted

Yes, all well and good for the Thai retailers to advise what is good for the country when they are the ones profiteering very, very well from this government scheme.

What are these retailers doing to help the less fortunate people who can least afford?

Tourists come to shop. They sleep in hotels and eat in restaurants, use taxi's, People who work in hotels and restaurant earn small wages; so they are helping them to keep their jobs.

Posted

Looks like a giveaway to the rich. If it is just for the tourist business then why not make the price reduction available as a tax refund only for tourists showing foreign passport. If they simply reduce the import tax for businesses importing luxury goods then most of the tax benefit will go to rich Thai consumers, who are after all the base of support for the junta.

Posted

Well, here's an idea...pretty sure it's called supply side economics, and it seems to hold a valid argument.

In a nutshell, lower taxes = more spending = more taxes paid = larger revenue for the government to waste on tanks, submarines, statues and rewards paid to police.

This idea however DOES require some form of accounting and tracking, which, given their praise for the '7 Deadly Days' crackdown, despite there being more fatalities than last year, does bring the question of what exactly are they tracking, besides "FACE" into question?

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...