Consider the following (consumption) tax rate scale:
- First $5 at 4.0% (Up to $5; GST up to $0.20)
- Next $5 at 4.5% (Up to $10; GST up to $0.43)
- Next $5 at 5.0% (Up to $15; GST up to $0.68)
- Next $5 at 5.5% (Up to $20; GST up to $0.95)
- Next $30 at 6.0% (Up to $50; GST up to $2.75)
- Next $50 at 6.5% (Up to $100; GST up to $6.00)
- Next $400 at 7.0% (Up to $500; GST up to $34.00)
- Next $500 at 7.5% (Up to $1000; GST up to $71.50)
- Next $1000 at 8.0% (Up to $2000; GST up to $151.50)
- Next $1000 at 8.5% (Up to $3000; GST up to $236.50)
- Next $2000 at 9.0% (Up to $5000; GST up to $416.50)
- Next $5000 at 9.5% (Up to $10000; GST up to $891.50)
- Item value above $10000 taxed at 10.0%
- Fairprice Kaya (400g) costing $2.40: $2.40 at 4.0%, GST $0.10.
- McSpicy Double Meal (Upsized) costing $8.80: $0.20 on first $5, remaining $3.80 at 4.5%, GST $0.37 (Effective rate: 4.22%).
- Dell UltraSharp U2412M 24" LED Widescreen Monitor costing $299.00: $6.00 on first $100, remaining $199.00 at 7.0%, GST $19.93 (Effective rate: 6.67%).
- Kate Spade Signature Spade costing $429.00: $6.00 on first $100, remaining $329.00 at 7.0%, GST $29.03 (Effective rate: 6.77%).
- XFX Radeon 7970 Black Edition 3GB costing $938.00: $34.00 on first $500, remaining $438.00 at 7.5%, GST $66.85 (Effective rate: 7.13%).
- Qatar Airways Economy SG to Paris, Rome to SG (incl. taxes) costing $1030.30: $71.50 on first $1000, remaining $30.30 at 8.0%, GST $73.92 (Effective rate: 7.17%).
- iPad with Wi-Fi + 4G 64GB (3rd generation) costing $1088.00: $71.50 on first $1000, remaining $88.00 at 8.0%, GST $78.54 (Effective rate: 7.22%).
- Hermes HER Bag costing $1690.00: $71.50 on first $1000, remaining $690.00 at 8.0%, GST $126.70 (Effective rate: 7.50%).
- Hermes Picotin Bougainviller costing $3690.00: $236.50 on first $3000, remaining $690.00 at 9.0%, GST $298.60 (Effective rate: 8.09%).
- Toyota Prius 1.8 costing $170k: $891.50 on first $10k, remaining $160k at 10.0%, GST $16891.50 (Effective rate: 9.94%).
In this tax regime, it makes sense to levy taxes at the "item level", meaning that a multi-item purchase would have tax assessed on items individually before everything is aggregated to give the final payment amount. This would enable sticker prices to continue to make sense, and would prevent perverse incentives to perform "purchase splitting".
4 comments:
It won't work. Are you going to queue twice at a supermarket to make your GST go down? Is the IRAS going to look at every single item and every single receipt of a grocer store to determine how much GST needs to be collected?
What might work is that you have special tax on special consumption items - maybe those costing $1000 or more.
GST would be computed item-wise. A simple GST calculator would be enough to price each item, just a little more complicated than multiplying by 1.07.
Most econ minimart owners aren't going to agree with you. They keep track of total sales, but not individual items. What you are proposing involves a complete overhaul of their inventory system and a fairly onerous burden on small businesses.
And don't get me started on the practical realities for hawkers and wet market stalls.
The practical reality is you don't have to register for GST unless your annual turnover is more than $1M. By then, you'll have the financial strength to accept this (small) compliance burden which is essentially the same as a flat 7%.
The tax take is likely to increase, so IRAS can take the lead in funding standard software which records the relevant information. The development and testing of which should not cost more than $50k-$100k.
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