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Belize General Sales Tax (GST): Issues for financial institutions.

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Presentation on theme: "Belize General Sales Tax (GST): Issues for financial institutions."— Presentation transcript:

1 Belize General Sales Tax (GST): Issues for financial institutions

2 1. Is a Broad-Based, Multi-Stage Tax on Value Added Broad–based: charged on a wide range of goods and services Multi-stage: charged at every level of the economic chain Value added: is a tax on the mark up on goods and services supplied by one business to another or to the final consumer WHAT IS GST?

3 A transaction tax on supplies Charged on each and every transaction involving the supply of goods or services, including business to business and business to consumer transactions A consumption tax Passed on to consumers in price of each consumer transaction WHAT IS GST (cont)

4 RATES - STANDARD RATE IS 10% - ZERO RATE (0%) THRESHOLD $75,000.00 PER ANNUM PRICES CHARGED TO BE GST INCLUSIVE EXEMPT AND ZERO RATED GOODS OR SERVICES MAIN FEATURES OF GST

5 Types of supply (≈ outputs/sales):  taxable supplies (standard-rated and zero-rated)  exempt supplies  non-taxable supplies Tax is only charged on taxable supplies: (a) supplies (b) made in Belize (c) by a taxable person (registered or required to be) (d) in the course or furtherance of the business, and (e) not exempt

6 Exemption = main issues for banks Net GST payable = output tax – input tax Consequences of exemption:  no tax chargeable on exempt supplies  no input tax credits for the related inputs including overheads)

7 (a) granting, negotiating, and dealing with loans, credit, credit guarantees, and security for money, including management of loans, credit, or credit guarantees by the grantor; (b) transactions concerning money, deposit and current accounts, payments, transfers, debts, cheques, or negotiable instruments, other than debt collection and factoring; (c)transactions relating to financial derivatives, forward contracts, options to acquire financial instruments, and similar arrangements; “FINANCIAL SERVICES” MEANS 

8 (d) transactions relating to shares, stocks, bonds, and other securities, other than custody services; (d) management of investment funds; (f) provision, or transfer of ownership, of an insurance contract or the provision of reinsurance in respect of such contract; “FINANCIAL SERVICES” MEANS  cont’d

9 (g) provision, or transfer of ownership, of an interest in a scheme whereby provision is made for the payment or granting of benefits by a benefit fund, provident fund, pension fund, retirement annuity fund or preservation fund; (h) a supply of credit under a finance lease, if the credit for the goods is provided for a separate charge and the charge is disclosed to the recipient of the goods; or (i)the arranging of any of the services in paragraphs (a) to (h); “FINANCIAL SERVICES” MEANS  cont’d

10 intermediation  provides cost efficiencies, pooling of savings, pooling of risks, & provision of liquidity transaction clearing services  cheques, credit cards… creation & maintenance of markets in financial instruments  provision of an efficient means for exchanging securities agency services  reduce costs of geographical separation between buyers & sellers or securities by acting as agent in the transaction Functions of financial services

11 Deposit-taking intermediation between suppliers and users of financial capital; Risk intermediation between high risk takers & low risk takers; hedging & gambling Insurance intermediation: pooling risks to spread exposure of the risk; Brokerage services: connecting buyers and sellers of commodities, currencies, & debt or equity securities. Categories of exempt transactions

12 B2C under ‑ taxation where exemption applies to a consumer transaction the bank’s value added is untaxed B2B cascading  over ‑ taxation where exemption applies to an intermediate transaction Incentive to in ‑ source/‘self-supply’ essential activities, rather than out-sourcing Incentive to outsource to offshore suppliers Problems created by exemption

13 Wholesaler Importer BankConsumer Cost: $60 Value added: $40 Sell for:$100 plus GST: $10 Taxed Price: $110 Cost: $100 Value added: $20 Sell for: $120 plus GST: $12 Taxed Price: $132 Cost: $132 Value added: $80 Sell for: $212 plus GST: $0 Taxed Price: $212 Cost: $212 (includes $12 tax) Exempt financial services: B2C $6 $10 - 6 $4 $4 $12 - 10 $2 $2 To customs To DGST $4$2 + + =$12 $6

14 Bank Importer RetailerConsumer Cost: $60 Value added: $40 Sell for:$100 plus GST: $10 Taxed Price: $110 Cost: $110 Value added: $20 Sell for: $130 Cost: $130 Value added: $80 Sell for: $210 plus GST: $21 Taxed Price: $231 Cost: $231 (includes $31 tax) $6 $10 - 6 $4 $4 $21 - 0 $21 $21 To customs To DGST $4$21 + + +=$31 $6 Exempt financial services: B2B

15 Why are financial supplies exempt?  2 party supplier/recipient analysis breaks down – problematic for the tax credit mechanism  measurement problem  identifying the value added on a transaction by transaction basis (separating interest from inflation and from underlying flow of financial capital)  allocation problem  allocating the value added to particular recipients of supplies LenderBankBorrower Loan Interest

16 Approaches around the world All countries exempt financial services but some try to minimise problems this creates: many have no specific provisions to minimise cascading & outsourcing problems some countries tax insurance (very complex provisions) some extend exempt treatment to a limited range of types of supply to the financial supplier NZ zero-rates B2B financial supplies some give partial input tax credits (ITCs) for financial supplies many require reverse charging to deal with offshore outsourcing  Belize some tax explicit fees but not implicit fees

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