FROM THE CHAIRMAN
December 2004 Issue

Restructuring the Tax System
Next
year, we are scheduled to take a good, hard look at our Hong Kong tax system, through the
government's consultation document on
the feasibility of introducing a Goods and Services Tax (GST). The Chamber has long
supported the need to reduce our fiscal dependence on a small number of companies and
salaried workers by broadening the tax base, and so this is indeed a welcome step forward.
Our committees have been studying various options for some time, and at the appropriate
juncture we will weigh into the public debate. We do, of course, welcome additional input
from members.
Two
other issues also need to be considered, in conjunction with a possible GST. The first is
reducing government spending, which as you know your Chamber has been championing for some
time. In the current fiscal year, operating expenditure is budgeted to rise by $5.5
billion, slightly more than last year, to a record high $212.2 billion. It will be the
fifth straight year of increased spending.
We
well understand that declining revenues have been the main source of our recent large
fiscal deficits. Declining land sales, salaries, profits and overall prices have exposed a
serious structural flaw in our revenue regime. However, the average 3.8 percent per annum
increase in operating expenditure over the five years to next March -- at a time when our
economy grew in nominal terms by perhaps 1 percent a year -- is also a serious structural
problem.
To
reduce our operating expenditure to the level of 2000/01 (when the economy was roughly the
same size it is this year) would require trimming about $13 billion off annual spending.
Obviously, such belt-tightening should not be achieved in one go, but just as clearly this
is an area of critical importance to our long term economic health, and one that needs
constant attention.
The
second consideration is the tax base itself. Three and a half years ago, the Advisory
Committee on New Broad-based Taxes pointed out that Hong Kong has a "noticeably heavy
reliance on taxation from corporate profits" as a percent of tax revenue. Even if we
were successfully to reduce our operating expenditure to the reasonable 14-15 percent of
GDP that prevailed in the 1998/99-2001/02 fiscal years, broadening the tax base would
still be both necessary and useful. And so, revenue considerations aside, the question is
how to broaden the tax base.
The
GST is not the only option being contemplated, but merely the one furthest along the
process toward public consultation. Several trial balloons are also being floated, most of
which would not be appropriate for our economy.
Recently,
ideas about taxes on capital gains taxes on dividends, interest and even individuals'
global incomes have been suggested. Each of these was examined by the Advisory Committee
noted above, and their merits weighed for efficiency, effectiveness, revenue generation
and the impact on Hong Kong's competitiveness.
The
Advisory Committee's study pointed out that "capital gains taxes are relatively
inefficient taxes for governments and taxpayers alike." Such taxes would encourage
residents to invest offshore, "may also have a detrimental effect on Hong Kong as a
destination for regional share listings and as a regional financial centre," and
"could adversely affect the property and stock markets." Clearly, such a tax
would be counterproductive in an economy like ours.
A
tax on interest was also deemed to be inefficient, easily avoided and to have potentially
adverse effects on the monetary system. Dividend taxes were deemed to be an inappropriate
type of double taxation. As for taxing world wide income, such a move would likely
generate no new revenue, as Hong Kong taxes are lower than those in most other
jurisdictions, and taxes paid to other governments would have to be deductible from tax
paid in Hong Kong.
We
believe that the findings of the Advisory Committee are equally valid today.
In
contrast to these possible new taxes, there is one existing tax which does not raise much
revenue and whose abolition would bring significant benefits to one important sector of
the Hong Kong economy, financial services. This is estate duty and the Chamber has
answered the recent request for consultation by putting in a submission to government
arguing for doing away with this. We believe this would greatly enhance the private wealth
management business in Hong Kong, increasing greatly activity and employment in this
sector.
But
to return to the subject of broadening our tax revenues, the Advisory Commission
determined in 2001 that a broad-based consumption tax was fair, effective, efficient,
flexible, in line with international norms and quite profitable as a source of revenue. It is of course essential that it is well designed
and with appropriate exemptions. It should also on inception be accompanied by some
reductions in income and corporation taxes.
In
closing, let me just add that I have been heartened and encouraged by the rapid recovery
in our economy this year. Our government revenues are improving, of that there is no
doubt. What remains is the hard work of reducing government expenditure and devising a
fair and efficient means of broadening the tax base to make our economy more robust to
deal with the ups and downs which the future will undoubtedly bring.
Anthony Nightingale
Chairman
HKGCC |