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Home International Customs

62,000 companies get friendly reminders from Royal Malaysian Customs Department

byCT Report
25/05/2017
in International Customs
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KOTA KINABALU: The Royal Malaysian Customs Department has identified 62,000 out of 441,000 companies who have failed to declare or under declared  either the Goods and Services Tax (GST). Its Director-General Datuk T Subromaniam said the department had sent friendly reminders to 21,000 companies in the first phase of its crackdown last week and would send similar notices to another 41,000 in the second phase this week. He said the friendly reminder approach was introduced in line with the department’s new policy to focus on informed compliance through education rather than compliance through enforcement previously. “The companies involved can check the notice via their Taxpayer Access Point. I am asking the companies involved to act quickly to correct their declaration and take the opportunity to pay the GST amount payable. “They are given three months from the date the notice is sent to do so, failing which stern action will be taken as the three-month period is reasonable enough,” he told reporters after presenting the Sabah Royal Malaysian Customs Department’s Outstanding Service Awards 2016 here yesterday.

Subromaniam said the friendly reminders were given to the companies registered under the GST after going through the GST-03 statements and other available figures which did not tally, or whether the errors were intentional, or for making under declaration. In Sabah, he said 3,378 companies  either did not declare or paid less GST than what it should be, with most of them in the retail sector, including restaurants and entertainment outlet operators. “Some (companies) think (if) they do not issue receipts, when the Customs comes to audit, with no documents available, the Customs cannot do anything. “This assumption is wrong and do not think the Customs do not know as we can still make an assessment,” he said. On another matter, Subromaniam said the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth of 5.6 per cent in the first quarter of this year also reflected increased consumption. “When consumption increase, the GST revenue also increase,” he said.

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