PAKATAN Harapan must have alternative revenue sources to plug the shortfall from abolishing the goods and services tax (GST) – a core proposal of its election manifesto – an economist said today.
Prof Yeah Kim Leng of Sunway University said a PH government will be hard pressed to find another source of income as the GST contributed RM42 billion to the national coffers in 2017, against the sales and services tax system (SST) which collected about RM20 billion.
“You can still try to find alternative sources of income such as reducing government expenditure through cutting on wastage,” Yeah told a seminar on the 14th Malaysian general election at the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore.
In its election manifesto, PH, which is campaigning against the ruling Barisan Nasional coalition, has promised to bring down the GST rate to 0% within the first 100 days of its administration.
The proposal has been criticised by members of the Najib administration who said it would deplete a necessary source of income.
PH, however, claimed that the GST has pushed up inflation and hurt low income Malaysians the most.
To make up for the shortfall in revenue, PH plans to bring back the SST, the consumption tax that existed prior to the introduction of the GST in 2015.
According to PH’s calculations, it plans to cut down on wastage and corruption in government spending, which it claims costs the country RM20 billion in lost funds every year.
In PH’s 2018 alternative budget, which formed the basis of its economic manifesto, the coalition said the new SST would contribute RM16.5 billion to public coffers.
This would bring down the loss from GST elimination to RM25.50 billion from RM42 billion, according to Wong Chen, one of the economic manifesto’s writers.
Reinjecting RM25.5 billion into the market will cause a boom in consumption and business activity that will further increase revenue for the government, Wong had said.
Yeah of Sunway University said a better alternative from totally abolishing GST would be to bring the rate down to 4% and to continue targeted subsidies for low income groups. – March 16, 2018.
Comments
Posted 8 years ago by Bigjoe Lam · Reply
Posted 8 years ago by Ong Taik Kheng · Reply
Posted 8 years ago by Tanahair Ku · Reply
austerity for 3 years. dont have to abolish toll. let existing concessions lapse. no more extensions.
liberalise the economy . open investment
Posted 8 years ago by Satkunabalan Sabaratnam · Reply