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Thread: About the 'right' property behaviour tax

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    Default About the 'right' property behaviour tax

    http://www.straitstimes.com/Review/E...ry_420864.html

    August 25, 2009 Tuesday

    Editorial

    About the 'right' property behaviour tax


    THE odd feature of the Finance Ministry's decision to not change the law on taxing gains made in individuals' property deals was that the public was asked its comment. This was being truly consultative, but was the outcome ever in doubt? There would not be a living person on earth who would say, without a trace of irony: 'Yes, tax me some more.' Without prejudice to the merits or demerits of the case, opposition was a foregone conclusion. The ministry received 64 responses to its proposal to make unambiguous the definition of which transactions over how long a period of time are not subject to income tax. This had the effect of making more property deals taxable as additional personal income. All but four of those who made submissions were opposed. The surprise was that it was not 64-0. Straight off, professional speculators and dabblers alike would be delighted, as the taxability stand is up to the taxman's interpretation of how 'regular' transactions had been. Tax law is better clear-cut than open to interpretation and court challenge.

    The announcement last week came smack in the middle of a real estate revival, where prospective price volatility caused partly by speculative behaviour is certain to cause the Government fresh problems. The proposal, the ministry explained, had nothing to do with influencing property cycles but was meant to stabilise the income tax structure. But there is no running away from the fact that disruptive and extreme price swings and the social consequences arising, evident at least since the early 1990s, are better moderated by law if necessary than be left completely to market forces. If it is the Government's judgment that speculation - of both the local and foreign moneybags varieties - will have an ever more pernicious effect on real estate in a land-scarce country, it will want to have in its armoury a law to discourage conduct that benefits a few but causes undue anxiety and uncertainty among genuine buyers.

    It could consider at some stage a standalone law to corral speculators by levying a tax on a sliding scale over maybe a five-year period. A property sold within the first year will attract the most tax. Thereafter the tax will be on a reducing scale until after the fifth year, when disposals attract no tax. Such tax treatment is biased intentionally against quick resale, but would not punish an investor who may sell only after values have accumulated over a number of years. The Government may well determine that flipping is a minority activity, and it is true not all speculators clear untold riches at the expense of a boring but stable market. In which case, keep a hawk's eye on mounting buyer anxieties.

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    mr funny is offline Any complaints please PM me
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    Default Tax proposals on property: MOF replies

    http://www.straitstimes.com/ST%2BFor...ry_422248.html

    August 28, 2009 Friday

    Tax proposals on property: MOF replies


    TUESDAY'S editorial, 'About the 'right' property behaviour tax', was wrong on the facts of the recent public consultation on income tax treatment for individuals who sold their properties.

    There was no proposal that had the effect of 'making more property deals taxable'. The proposed change was not aimed at doing so, and would not have resulted in more individuals having to pay income tax on gains from selling their properties.

    The proposed change, following feedback received over the years, had sought to provide certainty of non-taxation for one group of individual owners (those who had not sold any other property in the preceding four years) without any implications for taxation of other individuals.

    For all these other cases, whether the gains from a property sale are subject to income tax would have continued to depend on the facts and circumstances of the case - as has been the longstanding practice of the tax authorities in Singapore as well as many other jurisdictions.

    The editorial's musings on whether the Ministry of Finance (MOF) should even have asked people whether they wanted to be 'taxed more', were, therefore, misplaced. There was no proposed tightening of the income tax treatment for individuals who sell their properties, or greater likelihood that they would be brought to tax.

    This was explained clearly in the MOF's statement during the public consultation itself, reiterated recently, and carried in The Straits Times' own reports on the matter.

    Following the consultation, MOF decided not to proceed with the proposed change for individuals who sell no more than one property during a four-year period.

    While it was desirable to provide certainty of non-taxation to such individuals, there was no neat way of doing so without creating new distortions.

    Chin Sau Ho
    Director (Corporate Communications & Services)
    Ministry of Finance

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