Online mission too taxing

Read the original news 

Hanoi Times English - 12 month(s) ago 1 readings

The Hanoitimes - Deputy Finance Minister (MoF) Do Hoang Anh Tuan brings some light to why it would be hard to achieve a target of having 190,000-200,000 businesses filling their tax declarations o­nline by the year’s end.

The Hanoitimes - Deputy Finance Minister (MoF) Do Hoang Anh Tuan brings some light to why it would be hard to achieve a target of having 190,000-200,000 businesses filling their tax declarations o­nline by the year’s end.

The number of firms making o­nline tax declarations remains modest since the debut of the service 18 months ago though the move could help firms save time and cost. Why it was?

In fact, o­nline tax declarations could help firms save much time and cost. For instance, firms have to go to tax bodies at least 12 times per year for filling tax documents.

If resorting to the internet, firms can fill their tax declarations around the clock every day and seven days in a week instead of queuing at tax bodies waiting for turns to hand in tax documents.

Conveniences are apparent, but notwithstanding o­nly 118,000 businesses had registered to fill in tax documents o­nline as of June 30, 2012.

Is o­nline tax declarations a complex process?

It is simple. Firms o­nly need to have certified digital signatures provided by public digital signature service providers, have the ability to link to the internet and contact through e-mails with tax organisations and o­nline tax declaration service providers (T-VAN). Certified digital signatures may not be required in o­nline tax declarations if firms pay their taxes using banks’ ATMs, internet or mobile services.

Why are firms reluctant with conveniences associated with o­nline tax declarations?

Firms have attributed less-than-modern information technology infrastructure and incomplete declaration software to why they were not interested in using the service. However, in my view firms’ accountancy staff members do not want to fill tax declarations o­nline.

In fact, accountancy staff members in most small- and medium-sized sized enterprises (SMEs) are weak in professional and IT qualifications, so they prefer using traditional filling methods than doing declarations o­nline.

Current digital signature certification and T-VAN services are reportedly costly, failing to attract SMEs to use the services. Is that the case?

Scores of SMEs, particularly those in southeastern region and Ho Chi Minh City do not have specialised accounting staff. They lease outside people to do accounting services for them. This saves them costs but that cost is not lower than using digital signature certification and T-VAN services. As far as I know, the cost of using such services was around VND1.5 million ($70) per year o­ne year ago and is now halved and is trending downward since more firms providing these services came into existence.

What must we do to increase o­nline tax declarations among firms?

Parallel to propagation and support activities, the MoF needs to regulate o­nline tax declarations by law. Particularly, the amended Law o­n Tax Management shall regulate firms to handle activities with tax bodies using IT progress. For their part, tax bodies are obliged to support firms in enhancing accounting capacity, modernising accounting software or in information exchanges.

VIR

There is no comment

Please Sign up or Login to comment.

Top page