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WORLD / Wall Street Journal Exclusive

Tax-free may flee Hong Kong
By WENDY LEE (WSJ)
Updated: 2006-07-27 09:01

http://online.wsj.com/public/article/SB115385175089616820-jO_h3zp_Wb3_BniEcZEgkembA2E_20060801.html?mod=regionallinks

HONG KONG -- How do you sell a general sales tax to a commercial mecca that has never had one?

Cautiously.

Hong Kong has long thrived as a bustling center for merchants and a destination for shoppers. From the humblest market stall to the toniest boutique, the city is famous for its brisk commerce with little government interference. Last year more than 23 million visitors spent more than 105 billion Hong Kong dollars, or US$13.5 billion, here on everything from expensive electronics to designer clothes to cosmetics, most of it tax free.

Now the government is arguing that Hong Kong must broaden its narrow tax base to avoid the fiscal ups and downs that have rocked it in the past. The administration is pushing for a 5% sales tax and last week issued an 89-page report with its first detailed analysis of how it would work. The tax would exclude financial transactions such as mortgages and loans but cover almost everything else, from subway fares to fast food. The proposal also might be used to trim the corporate-tax rate.

The tax, if it becomes law, wouldn't take effect for several years, but already the very idea has everyone from shopkeepers to economists to the last British governor of Hong Kong sounding off.

Jack Maisano, president of the American Chamber of Commerce, fears "a new layer of bureaucracy and complexity" for businesses and tourists alike, though tourists could apply for a refund on some purchases.

"The fact that Hong Kong is the only developed economy without some kind of consumption tax is a unique competitive advantage," Mr. Maisano says. "Why give that up?"

Corporations operating in Hong Kong might enjoy a huge windfall under one of the proposal's scenarios. The government, intent on broadening its revenue base without exacting more taxes, plans to use the HK$20 billion or so it expects to reap each year from the sales tax to reduce the personal-salaries tax or the corporate-profits tax or to enhance public services. If the money goes toward cutting the already-low 17.5% maximum tax on incorporated businesses' profits, that rate could be sliced by as much as five percentage points.

Such a corporate bounty -- together with a sales tax the average Joe would feel most keenly -- isn't going down well with many in this city, where investment bankers in Maybach sedans glide by hunched old men and women peddling trinkets in the street. "You are robbing the poor to help the rich," legislator Lee Cheukyan of the Confederation of Trade Unions said at a Legislative Council session on the sales tax last week.

Even the popular and plainspoken Chris Patten, Hong Kong's last British governor, has gotten into the act, on a visit to the city last week to tout his new book, "Not Quite the Diplomat." In not-quite-diplomatic remarks to a local newspaper, he criticized Financial Secretary Henry Tang for the proposed sales tax, calling it "socially inequitable." Mr. Tang parried with a colorful Cantonese colloquialism.

The idea of the tax is "a surprise," says Jeff Lau, manager of Sun Electronics Co., a small shop in Hong Kong's jam-packed Wan Chai district. "We are not used to tax for more than half a century in Hong Kong."

Actually, it is more like a century and a half, since Hong Kong was ceded to Great Britain in 1842 at the end of the First Opium War. It then blossomed as a nexus of free trade between China and the West. Today, nine years after the British returned Hong Kong to Chinese control and nearly two decades since the idea of a general sales tax first was broached, it remains a hot topic in these parts.

Most everyone agrees the tax base should be broadened somehow. Hong Kong relies on a volatile revenue stream from taxes on income, property sales and business profits, all of which fell drastically during the Asian financial crisis of 1997-98 and plunged Hong Kong into a crippling deficit. While sales-tax revenue also would be somewhat cyclical, the broader base would add an element of stability.

Today, Hong Kong is flourishing economically, yet a July report from UBS Securities Asia Ltd. concludes that "Hong Kong's current fiscal position is far too dependent on pro-cyclical revenue sources such as land prices and investment income." Only the wealthiest 35% of Hong Kong people pay any income tax at all.

"Both local and foreign companies in Hong Kong would gain from the [corporate] profit-tax cuts," says Joe Lo, a senior economist for Citigroup. "Hong Kong will have a stronger attractiveness to foreign companies, and this would increase Hong Kong's competitiveness as a regional business sector."

The current, narrow tax base is "not sustainable," says David O'Rear, chief economist of the Hong Kong General Chamber of Commerce, who notes that besides Hong Kong, the only places in East Asia that don't have a sales tax are the Chinese special administrative region of Macau, the tiny sultanate of Brunei and North Korea.

"It's been done in almost every other developed economy of the world," Mr. O'Rear says. "This is not rocket science."

 
 

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