Singapore readies sales tax hike

Singapore readies sales tax hike as demographic crunch looms

/ 11:22 AM December 28, 2023

SINGAPORE  – Singapore households are bracing for a sales tax hike that takes effect in the new year as the government shores up coffers ahead of an expected surge in social spending in the rapidly ageing city-state in the years ahead.

The goods and services tax, which is levied on everything from groceries to diamond rings, will be increased by one percentage point to 9 percent on Monday, the second phase of a two-stage rate hike. This year the sales tax was raised to 8 percent from the previous 7 percent, which has been unchanged for 15 years.

The hikes comes on top of already rising living costs, prompting opposition lawmakers to call for a delay in the rise. Core inflation in Singapore has moderated to 3.2 percent in November from a peak of 5.5 percent in January and February, but remains stubborn with the central bank expecting it to average 2.5–3.5 percent in 2024.

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The government has said the tax increment was necessary to bolster state finances as it prepares for a surge in Singapore’s ageing population and rising healthcare costs. It is estimated that a quarter of the population will be 65 and older by 2030.

In August, Deputy Prime Minister Lawrence Wong wrote in a parliamentary response that “deferring the GST increase will only store up more problems for the future, leaving us with less resources to take care of our growing fiscal needs”.

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The government has handed out fiscal relief to households in an “assurance package” worth more than S$10 billion ($7.55 billion), including S$200 to S$800 paid out to all adult Singaporeans this month.

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Some retailers have pledged not to pass on the tax hikes for now. Home furnishing brand IKEA said it will absorb the 1 percent hike but did not say when it would end the initiative, while supermarket chain FairPrice Group will absorb the hike on 500 essential items like rice and vegetables.

($1 = 1.3237 Singapore dollars)

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TAGS: Singapore, spending, tax hike

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