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Wikipedia

Value-added tax

A value-added tax (VAT), known in some countries as a goods and services tax (GST), is a type of tax that is assessed incrementally. It is levied on the price of a product or service at each stage of production, distribution, or sale to the end consumer. If the ultimate consumer is a business that collects and pays to the government VAT on its products or services, it can reclaim the tax paid. It is similar to, and is often compared with, a sales tax. VAT is an indirect tax because the person who ultimately bears the burden of the tax is not necessarily the same person as the one who pays the tax to the tax authorities.

A map of countries and territories by their VAT status, 2019
  No VAT
  VAT

Not all localities require VAT to be charged, and exports are often exempt. VAT is usually implemented as a destination-based tax, where the tax rate is based on the location of the consumer and applied to the sales price. The terms VAT, GST, and the more general consumption tax are sometimes used interchangeably. VAT raises about a fifth of total tax revenues both worldwide and among the members of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).[1]: 14  As of June 2023, 175[2] of the 193 countries with full UN membership employ a VAT, including all OECD members except the United States,[1]: 14  where many states use a sales tax system instead.

There are two main methods of calculating VAT: the credit-invoice or invoice-based method and the subtraction or accounts-based method. In the credit-invoice method, sales transactions are taxed, the customer is informed of the VAT on the transaction, and businesses may receive a credit for the VAT paid on input materials and services. The credit-invoice method is by far the more common and is used by all national VATs except for Japan. In the subtraction method, a business at the end of a reporting period calculates the value of all taxable sales, subtracts the sum of all taxable purchases, and applies the VAT rate to the difference. The subtraction method VAT is currently used only by Japan although it, often by using the name "flat tax," has been part of many recent tax reform proposals by US politicians.[3][4][5] With both methods, there are exceptions in the calculation method for certain goods and transactions that are created to help collection or to counter tax fraud and evasion.

History

Germany and France were the first countries to implement a VAT, doing so in the form of a general consumption tax during World War I.[6] The modern variation of VAT was first implemented by France in 1954 in Ivory Coast (Côte d'Ivoire) colony. Recognizing the experiment as successful, the French introduced it in 1958.[6] Maurice Lauré, Joint Director of the France Tax Authority, the Direction Générale des Impôts implemented VAT on 10 April 1954, although German industrialist Wilhelm von Siemens proposed the concept in 1918. Initially directed at large businesses, it was extended over time to include all business sectors. In France it is the most important source of state finance, accounting for nearly 50% of state revenues.[7]

A 2017 study found that the adoption of VAT is strongly linked to countries with corporatist institutions.[6]

Overview

 
A Belgian VAT receipt

The amount of VAT is decided by the state as a percentage of the price of the goods or services provided. As its name suggests, value-added tax is designed to tax only the value added by a business on top of the services and goods it can purchase from the market.

To understand what this means, consider a production process (e.g., take-away coffee starting from coffee beans) where products get successively more valuable at each stage of the process. Each VAT-registered company in the chain will charge VAT as a percentage of the selling price, and will reclaim the VAT paid to purchase relevant products and services; the effect is that net VAT is paid on the value added. When an end-consumer makes a purchase subject to VAT—which is not in this case refundable—they are paying VAT for the entire production process (e.g., the purchase of the coffee beans, their transportation, processing, cultivation, etc.), since VAT is always included in the prices.

The VAT collected by the state from each company is the difference between the VAT on sales and the VAT on purchase of goods and services upon which the product depends, i.e., the net value added by the company.

Implementation

The standard way to implement a value-added tax involves assuming a business owes some fraction on the price of the product minus all taxes previously paid on the good.

By the method of collection, VAT can be accounts-based or invoice-based.[8] Under the invoice method of collection, each seller charges VAT rate on his output and passes the buyer a special invoice that indicates the amount of tax charged. Buyers who are subject to VAT on their own sales (output tax) consider the tax on the purchase invoices as input tax and can deduct the sum from their own VAT liability. The difference between output tax and input tax is paid to the government (or a refund is claimed, in the case of negative liability). Under the accounts based method, no such specific invoices are used. Instead, the tax is calculated on the value added, measured as a difference between revenues and allowable purchases. Most countries today use the invoice method, the only exception being Japan, which uses the accounts method.

By the timing of collection,[9] VAT (as well as accounting in general) can be either accrual or cash based. Cash basis accounting is a very simple form of accounting. When a payment is received for the sale of goods or services, a deposit is made, and the revenue is recorded as of the date of the receipt of funds—no matter when the sale had been made. Cheques are written when funds are available to pay bills, and the expense is recorded as of the cheque date—regardless of when the expense had been incurred. The primary focus is on the amount of cash in the bank, and the secondary focus is on making sure all bills are paid. Little effort is made to match revenues to the time period in which they are earned, or to match expenses to the time period in which they are incurred.

Accrual basis accounting matches revenues to the time period in which they are earned and matches expenses to the time period in which they are incurred. While it is more complex than cash basis accounting, it provides much more information about your business. The accrual basis allows you to track receivables (amounts due from customers on credit sales) and payables (amounts due to vendors on credit purchases). The accrual basis allows you to match revenues to the expenses incurred in earning them, giving you more meaningful financial reports.

Incentives

The main reason that VAT has been successfully adopted in 116 countries as of 2020[10] is that it provides an incentive for businesses to both register and keep invoices, and it does this in the form of zero rated goods and VAT exemption on goods not resold.[11] Through registration, a business effectively receives a VAT waiver on goods purchased for its own use.

VAT Refunds

Many countries offer VAT refunds to international travellers, both individual and business travellers. While VAT refunds are commonly utilized by tourists, the process for business travellers to reclaim VAT can be more complex. As a result, eligible refunds for business travel are often left unclaimed.

Some countries, particularly in Western Europe, offer VAT refunds on business-related expenses to encourage the hosting of business meetings, events, and conferences within their borders. These refunds often extend to costs incurred during trade fairs and exhibitions. In certain countries, VAT paid on meals and fuel may also be eligible for a refund.

Registration

In general, countries that have a VAT system require most businesses to be registered for VAT purposes. VAT-registered businesses can be natural persons or legal entities, but countries may have different thresholds or regulations specifying at which turnover levels registration becomes compulsory. VAT-registered businesses are required to add VAT on goods and services that they supply to others (with some exceptions, which vary by country) and account for the VAT to the taxing authority, after deducting the VAT that they paid on the goods and services they acquired from other VAT-registered businesses.

Comparison with income tax

Like an income tax, VAT is based on the increase in value of a product or service at each stage of production or distribution. However, there are some important differences:[12]

  • A VAT is usually collected by the end retailer. Therefore, even though VAT is actually incurred by all stages of production and distribution, it is frequently compared to a sales tax.
  • A VAT is usually a flat tax.
  • For VAT purposes, an importer is assumed to have contributed 100% of the value of a product imported from outside of the VAT zone. The importer incurs VAT on the entire value of the product, and this cannot be refunded, even if the foreign manufacturer paid other forms of income tax. This is in contrast to the US income tax system, which allows businesses to expense costs paid to foreign manufacturers. For this reason, VAT is often considered by US manufacturers to be a trade barrier, as further discussed below.

Comparison with sales tax

Value-added tax avoids the cascade effect of sales tax by taxing only the value added at each stage of production. For this reason, throughout the world, VAT has been gaining favor over traditional sales taxes. In principle, VAT applies to all provisions of goods and services. VAT is assessed and collected on the value of goods or services that have been provided every time there is a transaction (sale/purchase). The seller charges VAT to the buyer, and the seller pays this VAT to the government. If, however, the purchasers are not the end users, but the goods or services purchased are costs to their business, the tax they have paid for such purchases can be deducted from the tax they charge to their customers. The government receives only the difference; in other words, it is paid tax on the gross margin of each transaction, by each participant in the sales chain.

A sales tax incentivizes vertical integration and therefore discourages specialization and trade due to the fact that it taxes the full value of the product at each stage of production, instead of only the value that has been added to the product.

In many developing countries such as India, sales tax/VAT are key revenue sources as high unemployment and low per capita income render other income sources inadequate. However, there is strong opposition to this by many sub-national governments as it leads to an overall reduction in the revenue they collect as well as of some autonomy.

In theory, sales tax is normally charged on end users (consumers). The VAT mechanism means that the end-user tax is the same as it would be with a sales tax. The main disadvantage of VAT is the extra accounting required by those in the middle of the supply chain; this is balanced by the simplicity of not requiring a set of rules to determine who is and is not considered an end user. When the VAT system has few, if any, exemptions such as with GST in New Zealand, payment of VAT is even simpler.[13]

A general economic idea is that if sales taxes are high enough, people start engaging in widespread tax evading activity. On the other hand, total VAT rates can rise above 10% without widespread evasion because of its collection mechanism. However, because of its particular mechanism of collection, VAT is targeted by specific frauds like carousel fraud, which can be very expensive in terms of loss of tax incomes for states.

Examples

Consider the manufacture and sale of any item, which in this case is a widget. In what follows, the term "gross margin" is used rather than "profit". Profit is the remainder of what is left after paying other costs, such as rent and personnel costs.

Without any tax

 
Without any tax
  • A widget manufacturer, for example, spends $1.00 on raw materials and uses them to make a widget.
  • The widget is sold wholesale to a widget retailer for $1.20, leaving a gross margin of $0.20.
  • The widget retailer then sells the widget to a widget consumer for $1.50, leaving a gross margin of $0.30.

With a sales tax

With a 10% sales tax (tax amount in bold):

 
With a 10% sales tax
  • The manufacturer spends $1.00 for the raw materials, certifying it is not a final consumer.
  • The manufacturer charges the retailer $1.20, checking that the retailer is not a consumer, leaving the same gross margin of $0.20.
  • The retailer charges the consumer ($1.50 × 1.10) = $1.65 and pays the government $0.15, leaving the gross margin of $0.30.

So the consumer has paid 10% ($0.15) extra, compared to the no taxation scheme, and the government has collected this amount in taxation. The retailers have not paid any tax directly (it is the consumer who has paid the tax), but the retailer has to do the paperwork in order to correctly pass on to the government the sales tax it has collected. Suppliers and manufacturers have the administrative burden of supplying correct state exemption certifications which the retailer must verify and maintain.

The manufacturer is also responsible for making sure that their customers (retailers) are only intermediates and not end consumers (otherwise the manufacturer itself would need to charge the tax). In addition, the retailer must keep track of what is taxable and what is not along with the various tax rates in each of the cities, counties and states for the 35,000+ global taxing jurisdictions.

With a value-added tax

With a 10% VAT (tax amounts in bold):

 
With a 10% VAT
  • The manufacturer spends ($1 × 1.10) = $1.10 for the raw materials, and the seller of the raw materials pays the government $0.10.
  • The manufacturer charges the retailer ($1.20 × 1.10) = $1.32 and pays the government ($0.12 minus $0.10) = $0.02, leaving the same gross margin of ($1.32 – $1.10 – $0.02) = $0.20.
  • The retailer charges the consumer ($1.50 × 1.10) = $1.65 and pays the government ($0.15 minus $0.12) = $0.03, leaving the same gross margin of ($1.65 – $1.32 – $0.03) = $0.30.
  • The manufacturer and retailer realize less gross margin from a percentage perspective. If the cost of raw material production were shown, this would also be true of the raw material supplier's gross margin on a percentage basis.
  • Note that the taxes paid by both the manufacturer and the retailer to the government are 10% of the values added by their respective business practices (e.g. the value added by the manufacturer is $1.20 minus $1.00, thus the tax payable by the manufacturer is ($1.20 – $1.00) × 10% = $0.02).

In the VAT example above, the consumer has paid, and the government received, the same dollar amount as with a sales tax. At each stage of the production, the seller collects a tax on behalf of the government and the buyer pays for the tax by paying a higher price. The buyer can then be reimbursed for paying the tax, but only by successfully selling the value-added product to the buyer or consumer in the next stage. In the previously shown examples, if the retailer fails to sell some of its inventory, it suffers a greater financial loss in the VAT scheme, in comparison to the sales tax regulatory system, by having paid a higher wholesale price on the product it wants to sell.

Each business is responsible for handling the necessary paperwork in order to pass on to the government the VAT it collected on its gross margin. The businesses are freed from any obligation to request certifications from purchasers who are not end users, and of providing such certifications to their suppliers, but they incur increased accounting costs for collecting the tax, which are not reimbursed by the taxing authority. For example, wholesale companies now have to hire staff and accountants to handle the VAT paperwork, which would not be required if they were collecting sales tax instead.

Limitations to the examples

In the above examples, we assumed that the same number of widgets were made and sold both before and after the introduction of the tax. This is not true in real life.

The supply and demand economic model suggests that any tax raises the cost of transaction for someone, whether it is the seller or purchaser. In raising the cost, either the demand curve shifts rightward, or the supply curve shifts upward. The two are functionally equivalent. Consequently, the quantity of a good purchased decreases, and/or the price for which it is sold increases.

This shift in supply and demand is not incorporated into the above example, for simplicity and because these effects are different for every type of good. The above example assumes the tax is non-distortionary.

Limitations of VAT

 
A supply-demand analysis of a taxed market

A VAT, like most taxes, distorts what would have happened without it. Because the price for someone rises, the quantity of goods traded decreases. Correspondingly, some people are worse off by more than the government is made better off by tax income. That is, more is lost due to supply and demand shifts than is gained in tax. This is known as a deadweight loss. If the income lost by the economy is greater than the government's income, the tax is inefficient. VAT and a non-VAT have the same implications on the microeconomic model.

The entire amount of the government's income (the tax revenue) may not be a deadweight drag, if the tax revenue is used for productive spending or has positive externalities – in other words, governments may do more than simply consume the tax income. While distortions occur, consumption taxes like VAT are often considered superior because they distort incentives to invest, save and work less than most other types of taxation – in other words, a VAT discourages consumption rather than production.

In the diagram on the right:

  • Deadweight loss: the area of the triangle formed by the tax income box, the original supply curve, and the demand curve
  • Government's tax income: the grey rectangle captioned “Tax Revenue”
  • Total consumer surplus after the shift: the green area
  • Total producer surplus after the shift: the yellow area

Imports and exports

Being a consumption tax, VAT is usually used as a replacement for sales tax. Ultimately, it taxes the same people and businesses the same amounts of money, despite its internal mechanism being different. There is a significant difference between VAT and sales tax for goods that are imported and exported:

  1. VAT is charged for a commodity that is exported while sales tax is not.
  2. Sales tax is paid for the full price of the imported commodity, while VAT is expected to be charged only for value added to this commodity by the importer and the reseller.

This means that, without special measures, goods will be taxed twice if they are exported from one country that does have VAT to another country that has sales tax instead. Conversely, goods that are imported from a VAT-free country into another country with VAT will result in no sales tax and only a fraction of the usual VAT. There are also significant differences in taxation for goods that are being imported / exported between countries with different systems or rates of VAT. Sales tax does not have those problems – it is charged in the same way for both imported and domestic goods, and it is never charged twice.

To fix this problem, nearly all countries that use VAT use special rules for imported and exported goods:

  1. All imported goods are charged VAT for their full price when they are sold for the first time.
  2. All exported goods are exempted from any VAT payments.

For these reasons VAT on imports and VAT rebates on exports form a common practice approved by the World Trade Organization (WTO).[citation needed]

Example

→ In Germany a product is sold to a German reseller for $2,500+VAT ($3,000). The German reseller will claim the VAT back from the state (the refund time change in base of local laws and states) and will then charge the VAT to the customer.

→ In the USA a product is sold to another US reseller for $2,500 (without the sales tax) with a certificate of exemption. The US reseller will charge the sales tax to the customer.

Note: The VAT system adopted in Europe affects company cashflow due to compliance costs[14] and fraud risk for governments due to overclaimed taxes.[citation needed]

It's different for B2B sales between countries, where will be applied the reverse charge (no VAT charged) or sales tax exemption, in case of B2C sales the seller should pay the VAT or sales tax to the consumer state (creating a controversial situation by asking to a foreign company to pay taxes of their taxable residents/citizens without jurisdiction on seller).

Around the world

 
VAT rate by country
  No VAT
  ~5%
  ~10%
  ~15%
  ~20%
  ~25%

Armenia

In Armenia, the value added tax (VAT) is 20%. However, the expanded application is zero VAT for many operations and transactions in Armenia. That zero VAT is the source of controversies between the trade partners and Armenia, mainly between Russia, which is against the zero VAT and promotes wider use of tax credits. VAT is replaced with fixed payments, which are utilized for many taxpayers, operations, and transactions. The present VAT legislation in Armenia is based largely on the EU VAT Directive's principles.[15]

The VAT system in Armenia is input-output based. Companies who have registered for VAT are allowed to subtract the VAT on their inputs from the VAT they charged on their sales and report the difference to the tax authorities.[15] VAT is purchased quarterly. However, it is an exception when taxpayers state monthly payments. VAT is disbursed to the state's budget until the 20th day of the month after the tax period.[16] It came into effect on January 1, 2022. The draft law on the VAT plans were passed on November 11, 2021, and the plans were accepted on November 17.[17]

Australia

The goods and services tax (GST) is a value-added tax introduced in Australia in 2000, which is collected by the Australian Tax Office. The revenue is then redistributed to the states and territories via the Commonwealth Grants Commission process. In essence, this is Australia's program of horizontal fiscal equalisation. Whilst the rate is currently set at 10%, there are many domestically consumed items that are effectively zero-rated (GST-free) such as fresh food, education, and health services, certain medical products, as well as exemptions for Government charges and fees that are themselves in the nature of taxes.

Bangladesh

Value-added tax (VAT) in Bangladesh was introduced in 1991, replacing sales tax and most excise duties. The Value Added Tax Act, 1991 was enacted that year and VAT started its passage from 10 July 1991. In Bangladesh, 10 July is observed as National VAT Day. Within the passage of 25 years, VAT has become the largest source of Government Revenue. About 56% of total tax revenue is VAT revenue in Bangladesh. Standard VAT rate is 15%. Export is zero rated. Besides these rates there are several reduced rates, locally called Truncated Rates, for service sectors ranging from 1.5% to 10%. To increase the productivity of VAT, the Government enacted the Value Added Tax and Supplementary Duty Act of 2012. This law was initially scheduled to operate online with an automated administration from 1 July 2017, however this pilot project was extended for another two years.[18]

The National Board of Revenue (NBR) of the Ministry of Finance of the Government of Bangladesh is the apex organization administering the value-added tax. Relevant rules and acts include: Value Added Tax Act, 1991;[19][20][21][22] Value Added Tax and Supplementary Duty Act, 2012;[20] Development Surcharge and Levy (Imposition and Collection) Act, 2015;[23] and Value Added Tax and Supplementary Duty Rules, 2016.[24] Anyone who is selling a product and collects VAT from buyers becomes a VAT Trustee if they: register their business and collect a Business Identification Number (BIN) from the NBR; submit VAT returns on time; offer VAT receipts to consumers; store all cash-memos; and use the VAT rebate system responsibly. Anyone who works in the VAT or Customs department in the NBR and deals with VAT trustees is a VAT Mentor. The flat rate of VAT is 15%.

Barbados

VAT in Barbados was introduced on 1 January 1997 and replaced 11 other different taxes.[25] It was originally introduced at a rate of 15% but was later increased to a rate of 17.5% on most goods and services in 2011.[26] VAT on restaurant and hotel accommodations between 10% and 15% while no tax is levied on certain foods and goods listed by the government.[27] The revenue is collected by the Barbados Revenue Authority.[28]

Bulgaria

Value-added tax (VAT) in Bulgarian is currently 20% as of 2023. The reduced VAT rate of 9% on baby foods and hygiene products, as well as on books, is made permanent (it was due to expire at the end of 2022). A permanent reduced VAT rate of 9% will also apply to physical or electronic periodicals, such as newspapers and magazines, as of 1 January 2023.

Canada

Goods and Services Tax (GST) is a sales tax introduced by the Federal Government in 1991 at a rate of 7%, later reduced to the current rate of 5%. A Harmonized Sales Tax (HST) that combines the GST and provincial sales tax together, is collected in New Brunswick (15%), Newfoundland (15%), Nova Scotia (15%), Ontario (13%) and Prince Edward Island (15%), while British Columbia had a 12% HST from 2010 until 2013. Quebec has a de facto 14.975% HST: its provincial sales tax follows the same rules as the GST, and both are collected together by Revenu Québec.

Advertised and posted prices generally exclude taxes, which are calculated at the time of payment; common exceptions are motor fuels, the posted prices for which include sales and excise taxes, and items in vending machines as well as alcohol in monopoly stores. Basic groceries, prescription drugs, inward/outbound transportation and medical devices are exempt. Other provinces that do not have a HST may have a Provincial Sales Tax (PST), PSTs are collected in British Columbia (7%), Manitoba (7%) and Saskatchewan (6%). The province of Alberta and all three territories do not collect either a HST or PST.

Chile

VAT in Chile was introduced in 1974 through the Decreto Ley 825.[29] Since 2003, the standard rate of VAT is 19%. This tax makes the 41.2% of the total revenue of the country.[30]

China

VAT was implemented in China in 1984 and is administered by the State Administration of Taxation. In 2007, the revenue from VAT was 15.47 billion yuan ($2.2 billion) which made up 33.9 percent of China's total tax revenue for the year.[dubious ] The standard rate of VAT in China is 13%. There is a reduced rate of 9% that applies to products such as books and types of oils, and 6% for services except for PPE lease.[31]

European Union

The European Union value-added tax (EU VAT) covers consumption of goods and services and is mandatory for member states of the European Union. The EU VAT's key issue asks where the supply and consumption occurs thereby determining which member state will collect the VAT and which VAT rate will be charged.

Each member state's national VAT legislation must comply with the provisions of EU VAT law,[32] which requires a minimum standard rate of 15% and one or two reduced rates not to be below 5%. Some EU members have a 0% VAT rate on certain supplies; these states would have agreed this as part of their EU Accession Treaty (for example, newspapers and certain magazines in Belgium). Certain goods and services must be exempt from VAT (for example, postal services, medical care, lending, insurance, betting), and certain other goods and services to be exempt from VAT but subject to the ability of an EU member state to opt to charge VAT on those supplies (such as land and certain financial services). The highest rate currently in operation in the EU is 27% (Hungary), though member states are free to set higher rates. There is, in fact, only one EU country (Denmark) that does not have a reduced rate of VAT.[33]

There are some areas of member states (both overseas and on the European continent) which are outside the EU VAT area, and some non-EU states that are inside the EU VAT area. External areas may have no VAT or may have a rate lower than 15%. Goods and services supplied from external areas to internal areas are considered imported. (See EU VAT area § EU VAT area for a full listing.)

VAT that is charged by a business and paid by its customers is known as "output VAT" (that is, VAT on its output supplies). VAT that is paid by a business to other businesses on the supplies that it receives is known as "input VAT" (that is, VAT on its input supplies). A business is generally able to recover input VAT to the extent that the input VAT is attributable to (that is, used to make) its taxable outputs. Input VAT is recovered by setting it against the output VAT for which the business is required to account to the government, or, if there is an excess, by claiming a repayment from the government.

Private people are generally allowed to buy goods in any member country and bring it home and pay only the VAT to the seller. Input VAT that is attributable to VAT-exempt supplies[example needed] is not recoverable, although a business can increase its prices so the customer effectively bears the cost of the "sticking" VAT (the effective rate will be lower than the headline rate and depend on the balance between previously taxed input and labour at the exempt stage).

Gulf Cooperation Council

Increased growth and pressure on the GCC's governments to provide infrastructure to support growing urban centers, the Member States of the Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC), which together make up the Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC), have felt the need to introduce a tax system in the region.

In particular, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) on 1 January 2018 implemented VAT. For companies whose annual revenues exceed $102,000 (Dhs 375,000), registration is mandatory. Oman's Minister of Financial Affairs indicated that GCC countries have agreed the introductory rate of VAT is 5%.[34][35][36] The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia VAT system was implemented on 1 January 2018 at 5% rate. However, on 11 May 2020 the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia announced to increase the VAT from 5% to 15% as of 1 July 2020, due to the effects of the Corona pandemic and the decline in oil prices.[37]

India

VAT was introduced into the Indian taxation system from 1 April 2005. Of the then 28 Indian states, eight did not introduce VAT at first instance. There is uniform VAT rate of 5% and 14.5% all over India. The government of Tamil Nadu introduced an act by the name Tamil Nadu Value Added Tax Act 2006 which came into effect from 1 January 2007. It was also known as the TN-VAT. Under the BJP government, a new national Goods and Services Tax was introduced under the One Hundred and First Amendment of the Constitution of India.

Indonesia

Value-added tax (VAT) was introduced into the Indonesian taxation system from 1 April 1985. General VAT rate is ten percent. There are currently plans to raise the standard VAT rate to 12%. Using indirect subtraction method with invoice to calculate value-added tax payable. VAT was Collected by the Directorate General of Taxation, Ministry of Finance. Some goods and services are exempt from VAT like basic commodities vital to the general public, medical or health services, religion services, educational services and Services provided by the government in respect of carrying out general governmental administration.

Italy

The Italian Government used to apply a full value multi-phase tax on sales (IGE), but it switched in 1973 to the more efficient IVA, an indirect multi-phase tax on the Added Value. It uses a system of compensation (Debit-Credit Tax) and companies pay the tax on the good and services they buy. However, they can deduct it, bringing it to compensation with the taxes they collect form their client. In the end the system allows to apply a final taxation to the consumer of a fixed amount, regardless of the taxation applied during the production process. The percentages are: 4% for essential goods and services, 10% for medicine and some foodstuffs, 22% for ordinary goods and services.

Israel

Value-added tax (VAT) was first imposed in Israel on 1 July 1976, by virtue of the Value Added Tax Law, following the recommendations of the Asher Committee, which dealt with this matter during the first Rabin government. The initial rate of VAT was 8%.

From June 2013 to September 2015, the VAT rate was 18 percent. Since then, the VAT rate in Israel has been 17%.

Japan

Consumption tax (消費税, shōhizei) in Japan is 8%, which consists of a national tax rate of 6.3% and a local tax of 1.7%.[38][39] It is usually (but not always) included in posted prices. From 1 October 2019, the tax rate is proposed to increase to 10% for most goods, while groceries and other basic necessities will remain at 8%.[40]

Malaysia

The goods and services tax (GST) is a value-added tax introduced in Malaysia in 2015, which is collected by the Royal Malaysian Customs Department. The standard rate is currently set at 6%. Many domestically consumed items such as fresh foods, water, electricity and land public transportation are zero-rated, while some supplies such as education and health services are GST exempted. After being revised by the newly elected government after the General Election 14, GST will be removed across Malaysia from 1 June 2018 onwards.

As of 8 August 2018, the goods and services tax (GST) has been abolished and replaced by sales and services tax (SST) under the new government which promised to do so in their manifesto.[41][42] The new SST or SST 2.0, is on track to be rolled out on 1 September 2018. Former Finance Minister Lim Guan Eng said that failure to do so would result in an operating deficit of RM4 billion (approximately 969 million in USD) for the Malaysian government.[43] Under the new tax system, selected items will be subjected to a 5% or 10% tax while services will be subjected to a 6% tax.

Mexico

Value-added tax (Spanish: Impuesto al Valor Agregado, IVA) is a tax applied in Mexico and other countries of Latin America. In Chile, it is also called Impuesto al Valor Agregado and, in Peru, it is called Impuesto General a las Ventas or IGV.

Prior to the IVA, a sales tax (Spanish: impuesto a las ventas) had been applied in Mexico. In September 1966, the first attempt to apply the IVA took place when revenue experts declared that the IVA should be a modern equivalent of the sales tax as it occurred in France. At the convention of the Inter-American Center of Revenue Administrators in April and May 1967, the Mexican representation declared that the application of a value-added tax would not be possible in Mexico at the time. In November 1967, other experts declared that although this is one of the most equitable indirect taxes, its application in Mexico could not take place.

In response to these statements, direct sampling of members in the private sector took place as well as field trips to European countries where this tax was applied or soon to be applied. In 1969, the first attempt to substitute the mercantile-revenue tax for the value-added tax took place. On 29 December 1978 the Federal government published the official application of the tax beginning on 1 January 1980 in the Official Journal of the Federation.

As of 2010, the general VAT rate was 16%. This rate was applied all over Mexico except for bordering regions (i.e. the United States border, or Belize and Guatemala), where the rate was 11%. The main exemptions are for books, food, and medicines on a 0% basis. Also some services are exempt like a doctor's medical attention. In 2014 Mexico Tax Reforms eliminated the favorable tax rate for border regions and increased the VAT to 16% across the country.

Nepal

VAT was implemented in 1998 and is the major source of government revenue. It is administered by Inland Revenue Department of Nepal. Nepal has been levying two rates of VAT: Normal 13% and zero rate. In addition, some goods and services are exempt from VAT.

New Zealand

The goods and services tax (GST) is a value-added tax that was introduced in New Zealand in 1986, currently levied at 15%. It is notable for exempting few items from the tax. From July 1989 to September 2010, GST was levied at 12.5%, and prior to that at 10%.

The Nordic countries

MOMS (Danish: merværdiafgift, formerly meromsætningsafgift), Norwegian: merverdiavgift (bokmål) or meirverdiavgift (nynorsk) (abbreviated MVA), Swedish: Mervärdes- och OMSättningsskatt (until the early 1970s labeled as OMS OMSättningsskatt only), Icelandic: virðisaukaskattur (abbreviated VSK), Faroese: meirvirðisgjald (abbreviated MVG) or Finnish: arvonlisävero (abbreviated ALV) are the Nordic terms for VAT. Like other countries' sales and VAT, it is an indirect tax.

Year Tax level (Denmark) Name
1962 9% OMS
1967 10% MOMS
1968 12.5658% MOMS
1970 15% MOMS
1977 18% MOMS
1978 20.25% MOMS
1980 22% MOMS
1992 25% MOMS

In Denmark, VAT is generally applied at one rate, and with few exceptions is not split into two or more rates as in other countries (e.g. Germany), where reduced rates apply to essential goods such as foodstuffs. The current standard rate of VAT in Denmark is 25%. That makes Denmark one of the countries with the highest value-added tax, alongside Norway, Sweden and Croatia. A number of services have reduced VAT[citation needed], for instance public transportation of private persons, health care services, publishing newspapers, rent of premises (the lessor can, though, voluntarily register as VAT payer, except for residential premises), and travel agency operations.

In Finland, the standard rate of VAT is 24% as of 1 January 2013 (raised from previous 23%), along with all other VAT rates, excluding the zero rate.[44] In addition, two reduced rates are in use: 14% (up from previous 13% starting 1 January 2013), which is applied on food and animal feed, and 10%, (increased from 9% 1 January 2013) which is applied on passenger transportation services, cinema performances, physical exercise services, books, pharmaceuticals, entrance fees to commercial cultural and entertainment events and facilities.

Supplies of some goods and services are exempt under the conditions defined in the Finnish VAT Act: hospital and medical care; social welfare services; educational, financial and insurance services; lotteries and money games; transactions concerning bank notes and coins used as legal tender; real property including building land; certain transactions carried out by blind persons and interpretation services for deaf persons. The seller of these tax-exempt services or goods is not subject to VAT and does not pay tax on sales. Such sellers therefore may not deduct VAT included in the purchase prices of his inputs. Åland, an autonomous area, is considered to be outside the EU VAT area, even if its VAT rate is the same as for Finland. Goods brought from Åland to Finland or other EU countries are considered to be export/import goods. This enables tax-free sales onboard passenger ships.

In Iceland, VAT is split into two levels: 24% for most goods and services but 11% for certain goods and services. The 11% level is applied for hotel and guesthouse stays, licence fees for radio stations (namely RÚV), newspapers and magazines, books; hot water, electricity and oil for heating houses, food for human consumption (but not alcoholic beverages), access to toll roads and music.[45]

In Norway, VAT is split into three levels: 25% general rate, 15% on foodstuffs and 12% on the supply of passenger transport services and the procurement of such services, on the letting of hotel rooms and holiday homes, and on transport services regarding the ferrying of vehicles as part of the domestic road network. The same rate applies to cinema tickets and to the previous television licence (abolished in January 2020).[46] Financial services, health services, social services and educational services are all outside the scope of the VAT Act.[47] Newspapers, books and periodicals are zero-rated.[48] Svalbard has no VAT because of a clause in the Svalbard Treaty.

In Sweden, VAT is split into three levels: 25% for most goods and services, 12% for foods including restaurants bills and hotel stays and 6% for printed matter, cultural services, and transport of private persons. Some services are not taxable for example education of children and adults if public utility, and health and dental care, but education is taxable at 25% in case of courses for adults at a private school. Dance events (for the guests) have 25%, concerts and stage shows have 6%, and some types of cultural events have 0%.

MOMS replaced OMS (Danish omsætningsafgift, Swedish omsättningsskatt) in 1967, which was a tax applied exclusively for retailers.

Philippines

The current VAT rate in the Philippines stands at 12%. Like in most other countries, the amount of tax is included in the final sales price.

Senior citizens are however exempted from paying VAT for most goods and some services that are for their personal consumption. They will need to show a government-issued ID card that establishes their age at the till to avail of the exemption.

Russia

According to the Russian tax code the value-added tax is levied at the rate of 20% for all goods with several exemptions for several types of products and services (like medicare etc.). Taxpayers of value-added tax are recognized: Organizations (industrial and financial, state and municipal enterprises, institutions, business partnerships, insurance companies and banks), enterprises with foreign investments, individual entrepreneurs, international associations and foreign legal entities that carry out entrepreneurial activities in the territory of the Russian Federation, non-commercial organizations in the event of their commercial activities, and persons recognized as taxpayers of value-added tax in connection with the movement of goods across the customs border of the Customs Union.[49][50][51]

Singapore

VAT is known as the Goods and Services Tax (GST) in Singapore. It was first introduced in 1994 at 3%, which was among the lowest in the world as the focus was not to generate substantial revenue, but to allow Singaporeans to get adjusted to the tax.[52]

On 15 February 2007, Second Minister for Finance Tharman Shanmugaratnam announced that the GST rate would be increased to 7% from 1 July 2007. On 19 February 2018, Finance Minister Heng Swee Keat announced that the GST will be increased to 9% sometime between 2021 and 2025 to help spend more on healthcare, infrastructure and security.

On 18 February 2022, Finance Minister Lawrence Wong announced that the GST will rise from 7% to 9% in two stages in 2023 and 2024 to help to cushion the increase.[53]

Spain

In Spain, the VAT law has categorized goods and services into three types based on function, with according tax percentages. These three types of VAT are general VAT, reduced VAT and super-reduced VAT. However, there are some goods to which this tax is not applied.

General VAT

This VAT is 21%. This tax is the most common in the country because it is applied to any good or service made or performed in Spain. This percentage is from September 2018. Before that, the percentage was 18% and two years before that it was 16%.

Reduced VAT

This VAT is 10% and applies to foods, except staple foods. It is also applied to hostelry services, passenger transport and real estate sales. Specifically, this tax applies to:

  1. Food products for human or animal consumption (except alcoholic beverages, to which general VAT is applied).
  2. Goods or services related to forestry, livestock or agricultural activities (fertilizers, seeds, herbicides).
  3. Water (both drinking and irrigation)
  4. Devices intended to replace physical deficiencies (glasses, contact lenses, prostheses)
  5. Products, equipment, instruments and sanitary materials intended for the treatment, prevention or diagnosis of diseases (including medicines for use in animals and pharmaceutical products for direct use without medical prescription).
  6. Sale and reforms or repairs of real estate (homes, garages, annexes).
  7. Leases with option to purchase real estate.
  8. Transportation of passengers and their luggage (by land, sea or air).
  9. Hotel and restaurant activities, and all food and drink supplies.
  10. Health and dental care activities.[54]

Super-reduced VAT

In this group is essential goods. For that reason, this VAT is 4%. The different goods to which this percentage is applied are:

  1. Basic food products: bread, flour, milk, eggs, cheese, fruits, vegetables, cereals, tubers and legumes.
  2. Medications intended for human use, as well as medicinal substances and all the intermediate products used to obtain them.
  3. Press and books with content that is not exclusively promotional or advertising.
  4. Motor vehicles intended for the use of people with reduced mobility.
  5. Prosthetics and internal implants for people with some degree of disability.
  6. Official protection housing delivered by the property developer.
  7. Rental operations with purchase option on the Official protection housing.
  8. Home help services, resistance, residential care and day centers.

Nevertheless, there are some products that VAT is not assessed on. These goods and services are:

  1. Insurance, reinsurance and capitalization operations.
  2. Mediation services for natural persons.
  3. Financial products (but not financial advisory services).
  4. Post stamps.
  5. Leasing operations of Official protection housing destined to be habitual residence (as opposed to renting by companies).
  6. Professional medical and health care.
  7. Approved teaching given in official centers (public or private), as well as private training on approved subjects.

South Africa

Value-added tax (VAT) in South Africa was set at a rate of 14% and remained unchanged since 1993. Finance Minister Malusi Gigaba announced on 21 February 2018 that the VAT rate will be increased by one percentage point to 15%. Some basic food stuffs, as well as paraffin, will remain zero-rated. The new rate is to be effective from 1 April 2018.[55]

Switzerland and Liechtenstein

Switzerland has a customs union with Liechtenstein that also includes the German exclave of Büsingen am Hochrhein. The Switzerland–Liechtenstein VAT area has a general rate of 7.7% and a reduced rate of 2.5%. A special rate of 3.7% is in use in the hotel industry.[56]

Taiwan

Value-added tax (VAT) in Taiwan is currently 5% as of 1 June 2023.

Trinidad and Tobago

Value-added tax (VAT) in T&T is currently 12.5% as of 1 February 2016. Before that date VAT used to be at 15%.

Ukraine

In Ukraine, the revenue to state budget from VAT is the most significant. Under the Ukrainian tax code, there are three VAT rates:[57] 20% (general tax rate; applied to most goods and services), 7% (special tax rate; applied mostly to medicines and medical products import and trade operations) and 0% (special tax rate; applied mostly to export of goods and services, international transport of passengers, baggage and cargo).

United Kingdom

The default VAT rate is the standard rate, 20% since 4 January 2011. Some goods and services are subject to VAT at a reduced rate of 5% or 0%. Others are exempt from VAT.

Due to COVID-19, the United Kingdom temporarily reduced the VAT on tourism and hospitality. These sectors had a reduced 5% VAT rate until 30 September 2021. Between 1 October 2021 and 31 March 2022 the VAT rate then raised to 12.5%. From 1 April 2022, the VAT rate returned to the standard 20%.

United States

In the United States, currently, there is no federal value-added tax (VAT) on goods or services. Instead, a sales and use tax is used in most US states. VATs have been the subject of much scholarship in the US and are one of the most contentious tax policy topics.[58][59]

In 2015, Puerto Rico passed legislation to replace its 6% sales and use tax with a 10.5% VAT beginning 1 April 2016, although the 1% municipal sales and use tax will remain and, notably, materials imported for manufacturing will be exempted.[60][61] In doing so, Puerto Rico will become the first US jurisdiction to adopt a value-added tax.[61][62] However, two states have previously enacted a form of VAT as a form of business tax in lieu of a business income tax, rather than a replacement for a sales and use tax.

The state of Michigan used a form of VAT known as the "Single Business Tax" (SBT) as its form of general business taxation. It is the only state in the United States to have used a VAT. When it was adopted in 1975, it replaced seven business taxes, including a corporate income tax. On 9 August 2006, the Michigan Legislature approved voter-initiated legislation to repeal the Single Business Tax, which was replaced by the Michigan Business Tax on 1 January 2008.[63]

The state of Hawaii has a 4% General Excise Tax (GET) that is charged on the gross income of any business entity generating income within the State of Hawaii. The State allows businesses to optionally pass on their tax burden by charging their customers a quasi sales tax rate of 4.166%.[64] The total tax burden on each item sold is more than the 4.166% charged at the register since GET was charged earlier up the sales chain (such as manufacturers and wholesalers), making the GET less transparent than a retail sales tax.[citation needed]

Discussions about a federal VAT

Soon after President Richard Nixon took office in 1969, it was widely reported that his administration was considering a federal VAT with the revenue to be shared with state and local governments to reduce their reliance on property taxes and to fund education spending.[citation needed] Former 2020 Democratic presidential candidate Andrew Yang advocated for a national VAT in order to pay for universal basic income. A national subtraction-method VAT, often referred to as a "flat tax", has been part of proposals by many politicians as a replacement of the corporate income tax.[3][4][5]

A border-adjustment tax (BAT) was proposed by the Republican Party in their 2016 policy paper "A Better Way – Our Vision for a Confident America",[65] which promoted a move to a "destination-based cash flow tax"[66]: 27 [67] (DBCFT), in part to compensate for the U.S. lacking a VAT. As of March 2017 the Trump Administration was considering including the BAT as part of its tax reform proposal[needs update].

Vietnam

Value-added tax (VAT) in Vietnam is a broadly based consumption tax assessed on the value added to goods and services arising through the process of production, circulation, and consumption. It is an indirect tax in Vietnam on domestic consumption applied nationwide rather than at different levels such as state, provincial or local taxes. It is a multi-stage tax which is collected at every stage of the production and distribution chain and passed on to the final customer. It is applicable to the majority of goods and services bought and sold for use in the country. Goods that are sold for export and services that are sold to customers abroad are normally not subject to VAT.[citation needed]

All organizations and individuals producing and trading VAT taxable goods and services in Vietnam have to pay VAT, regardless of whether they have Vietnam-based resident establishments or not.

Vietnam has three VAT rates: 0 percent, 5 percent and 10 percent. 10 percent is the standard rate applied to most goods and services unless otherwise stipulated.

A variety of goods and service transactions may qualify for VAT exemption.[citation needed]

Tax rates

 
Standard VAT or sales tax rate
 
General government revenue, in % of GDP, from VAT. For this data, the variance of GDP per capita with purchasing power parity (PPP) is explained in 3% by tax revenue.

Examples by continent

European Union countries

 
EU VAT Tax Rates
Country Standard rate (current) Reduced rate (current) Abbreviation Local name
  Austria 20%[68] 10% for rental for the purpose of habitation, food, garbage collection, most transportation, etc.
13% for plants, live animals and animal food, art, wine (if bought directly from the winemaker), etc.[69]
MwSt./USt. MehrwertSteuer/UmsatzSteuer
  Belgium 21%[70] 12% or 6% (for food or live necessary consumables) or 0% in some cases BTW
TVA
MwSt
Belasting over de Toegevoegde Waarde
Taxe sur la Valeur Ajoutée
MehrwertSteuer
  Bulgaria 20%[68] 9% (hotels) or 0% ДДС Данък Добавена Cтойност
  Croatia 25%[68] 13% (since 1 January 2014) or 5% (since 1 January 2013) PDV Porez na Dodanu Vrijednost
  Cyprus 19%[71] 5% (8% for taxi and bus transportation) ΦΠΑ Φόρος Προστιθέμενης Αξίας
  Czech Republic 21%[68][72] 15% (food, public transport) or 10% (medicines, pharmaceuticals, books and baby foodstuffs) DPH Daň z přidané hodnoty
  Denmark 25%[68][73] 0% Moms Meromsætningsafgift
  Estonia 20%[68] 9% Km Käibemaks
  Finland 24%[68] 14% (foodstuffs, restaurants) or 10% (medicines, cultural services and events, passenger transport, hotels, books and magazines) ALV
Moms
Arvonlisävero (Finnish)
Mervärdesskatt (Swedish)
  France 20%[68] 10% or 5.5% or 2.1% TVA Taxe sur la Valeur Ajoutée
  Germany 19% (Heligoland 0%)[68][74] 7%[citation needed] for foodstuffs (except luxury-), books, flowers etc., 0% for postage stamps. (Heligoland always 0%) MwSt./USt. MehrwertSteuer/UmsatzSteuer
  Greece 24%[68][75]
(16% on Aegean islands)
13% (6.5% for hotels, books and pharmaceutical products)
(8% and 4% on Aegean islands)
ΦΠΑ Φόρος Προστιθέμενης Αξίας
  Hungary 27%[76] 18% (milk and dairy products, cereal products, hotels, tickets to outdoor music events) or 5% (pharmaceutical products, medical equipment, books and periodicals, some meat products, district heating, heating based on renewable sources, live music performance under certain circumstances) or 0% (postal services, medical services, mother's milk, etc.)[77] ÁFA Általános Forgalmi Adó
  Ireland 23%[68][78] 13.5% or 9.0% or 4.8% or 0% CBl
VAT
Cáin Bhreisluacha (Irish)
Value Added Tax (English)
  Italy 22%[68] (Livigno 0%)[68] 10% (hotels, bars, restaurants and other tourism products, certain foodstuffs, plant protection products and special works of building restoration, home-use utilities: electricity, gas used for cooking and water) or 4% (e.g. grocery staples, daily or periodical press and books, works for the elimination of architectural barriers, some kinds of seeds, fertilizers) IVA Imposta sul Valore Aggiunto
  Latvia 21%[68] 12% or 0% PVN Pievienotās Vērtības Nodoklis
  Lithuania 21%[68] 9% or 5% PVM Pridėtinės Vertės Mokestis
  Luxembourg 17%[79] 14% on certain wines, 8% on public utilities, or 3% on books and press, food (including restaurant meals), children's clothing, hotel stays, and public transit[79] TVA
MwSt./USt
MS
Taxe sur la Valeur Ajoutée
Mehrwertsteuer/Umsatzsteuer
Méiwäert Steier
  Malta 18%[68] 7% or 5% or 0% TVM
VAT
Taxxa tal-Valur Miżjud
Value Added Tax
  Netherlands 21%[68] 9% for special categories of products and services like food, medicine and art.

0% for products and services that are already taxed in other countries or systems, for excise goods, and for fish.

BTW/Ob Belasting over de Toegevoegde Waarde/ Omzetbelasting/ Voorbelasting
  Poland 23%[71][80] 8% or 5% or 0% PTU Podatek od Towarów i Usług
  Portugal 23%[81][82]
22% in Madeira and 18% in Azores[81][82]
13% for processed food, provision of services, and others such as oil and diesel, climate action focused goods and musical instruments and 6% for food products, agricultural services, and other deemed essential products such as farmaceutical products and public transport[83]
12% or 5% in Madeira and 9% or 4% in Azores[81][82]
IVA Imposto sobre o Valor Acrescentado
  Romania 19%[84] 9% (food and non-alcoholic drinks) or 5% (buyers of new homes under special conditions) TVA Taxa pe Valoarea Adăugată
  Slovakia 20%[68] 10% DPH Daň z Pridanej Hodnoty
  Slovenia 22%[85] 9.5% DDV Davek na Dodano Vrednost
  Spain 21%[68]
7% in Canary Islands (not part of EU VAT area)
10% (10% from 1 September 2012[86]) or 4%[68][87]
3% or 0% in Canary Islands
IVA
IGIC
Impuesto sobre el Valor Añadido
Impuesto General Indirecto Canario
  Sweden 25%[68] 12% (e.g. food, hotels and restaurants), 6% (e.g. books, passenger transport, cultural events and activities), 0% (e.g. insurance, financial services, health care, dental care, prescription drugs, immovable property)[88][89] MOMS Mervärdes- och OMSättningsskatt

Non-European Union countries

Country Standard rate (current) Reduced rate (current) Local name
  Albania[90] 20% 6% (accommodation services) or 0% (postal, medical, dental and welfare services) TVSH = Tatimi mbi Vlerën e Shtuar
  Algeria 19% The reduced VAT rate in Algeria is currently 9%. It applies to basic goods and services such as food, medicine, and transportation. ?
  Andorra[91] 4.5% 1% IGI = Impost General Indirecte
  Angola[92] 7% 5% which applies to the import and supply of certain goods (products of the Basic Basket listed in Annex I of the VAT Code and agricultural inputs) ?
  Antigua and Barbuda 15% ?
  Argentina 21% 10.5% or 0% IVA = Impuesto al Valor Agregado
  Armenia 20% 0% AAH = Avelacvats Arzheqi Hark
ԱԱՀ = Ավելացված արժեքի հարկ
  Australia 10% 0% fresh food, medical services, medicines and medical devices, education services, childcare, water and sewerage, government taxes & permits and many government charges, precious metals, second-hand goods and many other types of goods. Rebates for exported goods and GST taxed business inputs are also available GST = Goods and Services Tax
  Azerbaijan 18% 10.5% or 0% ƏDV = Əlavə dəyər vergisi
  Bahamas[93][94] 12% 12% or 0% (including but not limited to exports of goods or services, services to a foreign going vessel providing international commercial services, consumable goods for commercially scheduled foreign going vessels/aircraft, copyright, etc.) VAT = Value Added Tax
  Bahrain 10% 0% (pharmacies and medical services, road transport, education service, Oil and gas derivatives, Vegetables and fruits, National exports) (VAT) ضريبة القيمة المضافة
  Bangladesh 15% 4% for supplier, 4.5% for ITES, 5% for electricity, 5.5% for construction firm, etc. Musok = Mullo songzojon kor
মূসক = "মূল্য সংযোজন কর"
  Barbados 17.5% VAT = Value Added Tax
  Belarus 20% 10% or 0.5% ПДВ = Падатак на дададзеную вартасьць
  Belize 12.5% ?
  Benin 18% ?
  Bolivia 13% IVA = Impuesto al Valor Agregado
  Bosnia and Herzegovina 17% PDV = Porez na dodanu vrijednost
  Botswana 12% ?
  Brazil 20% (IPI) + 19% (ICMS) average + 3% (ISS) average 0% *IPI – 20% = Imposto sobre produtos industrializados (Tax over industrialized products) – Federal Tax
ICMS – 17 to 25% = Imposto sobre circulação e serviços (tax over commercialization and services) – State Tax
ISS – 2 to 5% = Imposto sobre serviço de qualquer natureza (tax over any service) – City tax
  Burkina Faso 18% ?
  Burundi 18% ?
  Cambodia 10% ?
  Cameroon 19.25% ?
  Canada 5% GST + 0–9.975% PST or 13-15% HST depending on province. 0% [a] on GST or HST for Prescription drugs, medical devices, basic groceries, agricultural/fishing products, exported or foreign goods, services and travel. Other exemptions exist for PSTs and vary by province. GST = Goods and Services Tax
HST[b] = Harmonized Sales Tax
PST = Provincial Sales Tax
  Cape Verde 15% ?
  Central African Republic 19% ?
  Chad 18% ?
  Chile 19% IVA = Impuesto al Valor Agregado
  China[c] 13% 9% for foods, printed matter, and households fuels; 6% for service; or 3% for non-value-added tax 增值税 (zēng zhí shuì)
  Colombia 19% IVA = Impuesto al Valor Agregado
  Costa Rica 13% ?
  Democratic Republic of the Congo 16% ?
  Dominica 15% ?
  Dominican Republic 18% 12% or 0% ITBIS = Impuesto sobre Transferencia de Bienes Industrializados y Servicios
  Ecuador 12% 0% IVA = Impuesto al Valor Agregado
  Egypt 14% (15% on communication services) VAT = Value Added Tax (الضريبة على القيمة المضافة)
  El Salvador 13% IVA = Impuesto al Valor Agregado o "Impuesto a la Transferencia de Bienes Muebles y a la Prestación de Servicios"
  Equatorial Guinea 15% ?
  Ethiopia 15% VAT = Value Added Tax
  Faroe Islands 25% MVG = Meirvirðisgjald
  Fiji 15% 0% VAT = Value Added Tax
  Gabon 18% ?
  Gambia[95] 15% VAT = Value Added Tax
  Georgia 18% 0% DGhG = Damatebuli Ghirebulebis gadasakhadi დღგ = დამატებული ღირებულების გადასახადი
  Ghana 15% VAT = Value Added Tax plus National Health Insurance Levy (NHIL; 2.5%)
  Grenada 15% ?
  Guatemala 12% IVA = Impuesto al Valor Agregado
  Guinea 18% ?
  Guinea-Bissau 15% ?
  Guyana 16% 0% VAT = Value Added Tax
  Haiti 10% ?
  Honduras 15% (4% additional on tourism tax)[96] ISV = Impuesto Sobre Ventas
  Iceland 24% 11%[d] VSK, VASK = Virðisaukaskattur
  India[e] 5.5% 5.5% VAT = Value Added Tax
  Indonesia 11% 11%, 0% for primary groceries, medical services, financial services, education and also insurance PPN = Pajak Pertambahan Nilai
  Iran 9% VAT = Value Added Tax (مالیات بر ارزش افزوده)
  Isle of Man 20% ?
  Israel[f] 17%[g] (0% in Eilat) 0% (fruits and vegetables, tourism services for foreign citizens, intellectual property, diamonds, flights and apartments renting) Ma'am = מס ערך מוסף, מע"מ
  Ivory Coast 18% ?
  Jamaica 12.5% ?
  Japan 10% 8% (groceries) shōhizei (消費税) ("consumption tax")
  Jersey[h] 5% 0% GST = Goods and Services Tax
  Jordan 16% GST = Goods and Sales Tax
  Kazakhstan 12% ҚCҚ = Қосылған құнға салынатын салық (Kazakh)
VAT = Value Added Tax
  Kenya 16% ?
  Kyrgyzstan 20% ?
  Laos 10% ?
  Lebanon 11% TVA = Taxe sur la valeur ajoutée
  Lesotho 14% ?
  Liechtenstein[98] 7.7% 3.8% (lodging services) or 2.5% MWST = Mehrwertsteuer
  Madagascar 20% ?
  Malawi 16.5% ?
  Malaysia[i] 6% 0% for fresh foods, education, healthcare, land public transportation and medicines. Sales and Services Tax (SST) was reintroduced by the Malaysian Government on 1 September 2018 to replace the Goods and Services Tax (GST) which had only been introduced just over three years before that, on 1 April 2015.[100] SST = Sales and Services Tax
CJP = Cukai Jualan dan Perkhidmatan

GST = Goods and Services Tax (Malaysia)

  Maldives 6% 0% GST = Goods and services tax (Government Tax)
  Mali 18% ?
  Mauritania 14% ?
  Mauritius 15% VAT = Value Added Tax
  Mexico 16% 0% on books, food and medicines. IVA = Impuesto al Valor Agregado
  Moldova 20% 8%, 5% or 0% TVA = Taxa pe Valoarea Adăugată
  Monaco[101] 19.6% 5.6% TVA = Taxe sur la valeur ajoutée
  Mongolia 10% 0% VAT = Нэмэгдсэн өртгийн албан татвар
  Montenegro 21% 7% PDV = Porez na dodatu vrijednost
  Morocco 20% TVA = Taxe sur Valeur Ajoutée (الضريبة على القيمة المضافة)
  Mozambique 17% ?
  Namibia 15% 0% VAT = Value Added Tax
    Nepal 13% 0% VAT = Value Added Taxes
  New Zealand 15% 0% (donated goods and services sold by non-profits, financial services, rental payments for residential properties, supply of fine metals, and penalty interest).[102] GST = Goods and Services Tax
  Nicaragua 15% ?
  Niger 19% ?
  Nigeria 7.5% ?
  Niue 5% ?
  North Macedonia 18% 5% or 0% ДДВ = Данок на додадена вредност, DDV = Danok na dodadena vrednost
  Norway 25% 15% (food), 12% (public transport, hotel, cinema) and 0% for electric cars (until 2018)[103] MVA = Merverdiavgift (bokmål) or meirverdiavgift (nynorsk) (informally moms)
  Pakistan 17% 1% or 0% GST = General Sales Tax
  Palau 10%[104] PGST = Palau Goods & Services Tax
  Palestine 16% VAT = Value Added Tax
  Panama 7% 0% ITBMS = Impuesto de Transferencia de Bienes Muebles y Servicios
  Papua New Guinea 10% ?
  Paraguay 10% 5% IVA= Impuesto al Valor Agregado
  Peru 18% IGV – 16% = Impuesto General a la Ventas IPM – 2% Impuesto de Promocion Municipal
  Philippines 12%[j] 6% on petroleum products, and electricity and water services
0% for senior citizens (all who are aged 60 and above) on medicines, professional fees for physicians, medical and dental services, transportation fares, admission fees charged by theaters and amusement centers, and funeral and burial services after the death of the senior citizen
RVAT = Reformed Value Added Tax, locally known as Karagdagang Buwis / Dungag nga Buhis
  Republic of Congo 16% ?
  Russia 20% 10% (essential food, goods for children and medical products)[106] or 0% НДС = Налог на добавленную стоимость, NDS = Nalog na dobavlennuyu stoimost'
  Rwanda 18% 0% VAT = Value Added Tax
  Saint Kitts and Nevis 17% VAT = Value Added Tax
  Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 15% ?
  Samoa 15% ?
  Saudi Arabia 15% ضريبة القيمة المضافة (VAT)
  Senegal 18% ?
  Serbia 20%[107] 10%[108] or 0% ПДВ = Порез на додату вредност, PDV = Porez na dodatu vrednost
  Seychelles 15% ?
  Sierra Leone 15% ?
  Singapore 8% 0% for public healthcare services, such as at public hospitals and polyclinics, with GST absorbed by the government. GST = Goods and Services Tax
  South Africa 15% 0% on basic foodstuffs such as bread, additionally on goods donated not for gain; goods or services used for educational purposes, such as school computers; membership contributions to an employee organization (such as labour union dues); and rent paid on a house by a renter to a landlord.[109] VAT = Valued Added Tax; BTW = Belasting op toegevoegde waarde
  South Korea 10% 0% (essential foodstuffs) VAT = bugagachise (Korean부가가치세; Hanja附加價値稅)
  Sri Lanka 12% 0% VAT = Valued Added Tax has been in effect in Sri Lanka since 2001. On the 2001 budget, the rates have been revised to 12% and 0% from the previous 20%, 12% and 0%
  Sudan 17% ?
   Switzerland 7.7%[110] 3.7% (hotel sector) and 2.5% (essential foodstuff, books, newspapers, medical supplies)[110] MWST = Mehrwertsteuer, TVA = Taxe sur la valeur ajoutée, IVA = Imposta sul valore aggiunto, TPV = Taglia sin la Plivalur
  Taiwan 5% 營業稅 yíng yè shuì (business tax) / 加值型營業稅 jiā zhí xíng yíng yè shuì (value-added business tax)
  Tajikistan 20% ?
  Tanzania 18% ?
  Thailand 10% 7% VAT = Value Added Tax, ภาษีมูลค่าเพิ่ม
  Togo 18% ?
  Tonga 15% ?
  Trinidad and Tobago 12.5% 0% ?
  Tunisia 18% TVA = Taxe sur la Valeur Ajoutée آداء على القيمة المضافة
  Turkey 20% 10% or 1% KDV = Katma değer vergisi
  Turkmenistan 15% ?
  Uganda 18% ?
  Ukraine 20% 7% or 0% ПДВ = Податок на додану вартість, PDV = Podatok na dodanu vartist'.
  United Arab Emirates 5% ضريبة القيمة المضافة
  United Kingdom 20%[111]
0% in Guernsey and Gibraltar (not part of EU VAT area)
5% residential energy/insulation/renovations, feminine hygiene products, child safety seats and mobility aids and 0% for life necessities – basic food, water, prescription medications, medical equipment and medical supply, public transport, children's clothing, books and periodicals. Also 0% for new building construction (but standard rate for building demolition, modifications, renovation etc.)[112] VAT

TAW = Value Added Tax Treth Ar Werth (Welsh)

  Uruguay 22% 18% or 0% IVA = Impuesto al Valor Agregado
  Uzbekistan 12% QQS = Qoʻshilgan qiymat soligʻi
  Vanuatu 13% ?
  Vietnam 10% 5% or 0% GTGT = Giá Trị Gia Tăng
  Venezuela 12% 11% IVA = Impuesto al Valor Agregado
  Zambia 16% ?
  Zimbabwe 15% ?
  1. ^ No reduced rate, but rebates generally available for certain services
  2. ^ HST is a combined federal/provincial sales tax collected in some provinces. GST is a 5% federal sales tax collected separately if there is a PST. 5% of HSTs go to the federal government and the remainder to the province.
  3. ^ These taxes do not apply in Hong Kong and Macau, which are financially independent as special administrative regions.
  4. ^ The reduced rate was 14% until 1 March 2007, when it was lowered to 7%, and later changed to 11%. The reduced rate applies to heating costs, printed matter, restaurant bills, hotel stays, and most food.
  5. ^ VAT is not implemented in 2 of India's 28 states.
  6. ^ Except Eilat, where VAT is not raised.[97]
  7. ^ The VAT in Israel is in a state of flux. It was reduced from 18% to 17% in March 2004, to 16.5% in September 2005, then to 15.5% in July 2006. It was then raised back to 16.5% in July 2009, and lowered to the rate of 16% in January 2010. It was then raised again to 17% on 1 September 2012, and once again on 2 June 2013, to 18%. It was reduced from 18% to 17% in October 2015.
  8. ^ The introduction of a goods and sales tax of 3% on 6 May 2008 was to replace revenue from Company Income Tax following a reduction in rates.
  9. ^ In the 2014 Budget, the government announced that GST would be introduced in April 2015. Piped water, power supply (the first 200 units per month for domestic consumers), transportation services, education, and health services are tax-exempt. However, many details have not yet been confirmed.[99]
  10. ^ The President of the Philippines has the power to raise the tax to 12% after 1 January 2006. The tax was raised to 12% on 1 February.[105]

VAT-free countries and territories

As of January 2022, the countries and territories listed remained VAT-free.[citation needed]

Country[113] Notes
  Akrotiri and Dhekelia British Overseas Territory
  Anguilla British Overseas Territory
  Bermuda British Overseas Territory
  British Antarctic Territory British Overseas Territory
  British Indian Ocean Territory British Overseas Territory
  British Virgin Islands British Overseas Territory
  Brunei
  Cayman Islands British Overseas Territory
  Cuba
  Falkland Islands British Overseas Territory
  Gibraltar British Overseas Territory
  Guernsey British Crown Dependency
  Hong Kong Special administrative region of China
  Iraq
  Kiribati VAT
  Libya
  Macau Special administrative region of China
  Maldives
  Marshall Islands
  Micronesia
  Montserrat British Overseas Territory
  Myanmar
  Nauru
  North Korea
  Pitcairn Islands British Overseas Territory
  Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha British Overseas Territory
  San Marino
  Sao Tome and Principe
  Solomon Islands
  Somalia
  South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands British Overseas Territory
  South Sudan 18% VAT
  Svalbard
  Swaziland
  Syria Just recent tax of 14.85% (hotels) and 10% (restaurants)
  Timor Leste
  Turks and Caicos Islands British Overseas Territory
  Tuvalu
  United States Sales taxes are collected by most states and some cities, counties, and Native American reservations. The federal government collects excise tax on some goods, but does not collect a nationwide sales tax.
  Vatican City
  Yemen

Criticisms

 
4 May 2010 "Campaña no más IVA" in Spain

The "value-added tax" has been criticized as the burden of it falls on personal end-consumers of products. Some critics consider it to be a regressive tax, meaning that the poor pay more, as a percentage of their income, than the rich.[114] Defenders argue that relating taxation levels to income is an arbitrary standard, and that the value-added tax is in fact a proportional tax; an OECD study found that it could be slightly progressive—but still have significant equity implications for the poor—as people with higher income pay more as they consume more.[115][116] The effective regressiveness of a VAT system can also be affected when different classes of goods are taxed at different rates.[114] Some countries implementing a VAT have reduced income tax on lower income-earners as well as instituted direct transfer payments to lower-income groups, resulting in lowering tax burdens on the poor.[117]

Revenues from a value-added tax are frequently lower than expected because they are difficult and costly to administer and collect.[citation needed] In many countries, however, where collection of personal income taxes and corporate profit taxes has been historically weak, VAT collection has been more successful than other types of taxes. VAT has become more important in many jurisdictions as tariff levels have fallen worldwide due to trade liberalization, as VAT has essentially replaced lost tariff revenues. Whether the costs and distortions of value-added taxes are lower than the economic inefficiencies and enforcement issues (e.g. smuggling) from high import tariffs is debated, but theory suggests value-added taxes are far more efficient.[citation needed]

Certain industries (small-scale services, for example) tend to have more VAT avoidance, particularly where cash transactions predominate, and VAT may be criticized for encouraging this.[citation needed] From the perspective of government, however, VAT may be preferable because it captures at least some of the value added. For example, a building contractor may offer to provide services for cash (i.e. without a receipt, and without VAT) to a homeowner, who usually cannot claim input VAT back. The homeowner will thus bear lower costs and the building contractor may be able to avoid other taxes (profit or payroll taxes)[citation needed]. Another avenue of criticism of implementing a VAT is that the increased tax passed to the consumer will increase the ultimate price paid by the consumer.

Deadweight loss

The incidence of VAT may not fall entirely on consumers as traders tend to absorb VAT so as to maintain volumes of sales. Conversely, not all cuts in VAT are passed on in lower prices. VAT consequently leads to a deadweight loss if cutting prices pushes a business below the margin of profitability. The effect can be seen when VAT is cut or abolished. When VAT on restaurant meals in Sweden was reduced from 25% to 12.5%, 11,000 additional jobs were created.[118]

Risk of fraud criticism

VAT offers distinctive opportunities for evasion and fraud, especially through abuse of the credit and refund mechanism.[119] VAT overclaim is a risk for the state due to fraudulent claims for input repayment by registered traders and carousel fraud. There is leads to a VAT gap which can be up to 34% (in the case of Romania).[120]

Churning

Because VAT is included in the price index to which state benefits such as pensions and welfare payments are linked, as well as public sector pay, some of the apparent revenue is churned i.e. taxpayers have to be given the money to pay the tax with, resulting in zero net revenue.[121]

Cashflow impacts

Multiple VAT charges over the supply chain give rise to cashflow problems due to refund delays from the tax administration.[14]

Compliance costs

Compliance costs for VAT are a heavy burden on business.[122] In the UK, compliance costs for VAT have been estimated by Professor Cedric Sandford to be about 4% of the yield, though the figure is higher for smaller businesses.[123]

Trade criticism

 
National VAT act as a tariff on imports and their exports are exempt from VAT (zero-rated).[124]

Because exports are generally zero-rated (and VAT refunded or offset against other taxes), this is often where VAT fraud occurs. In Europe, the main source of problems is called carousel fraud.[citation needed]

This kind of fraud originated in the 1970s in the Benelux countries. Today, VAT fraud is a major problem in the UK.[125] There are also similar fraud possibilities inside a country. To avoid this, in some countries like Sweden, the major owner of a limited company is personally responsible for taxes.[124]

Under a sales tax system, only businesses selling to the end-user are required to collect tax and bear the accounting cost of collecting the tax. Under VAT, manufacturers and wholesale companies also incur accounting expenses to handle the additional paperwork required for collecting VAT, increasing overhead costs and prices.

Many politicians and economists in the United States consider value-added taxation on US goods and VAT rebates for goods from other countries to be unfair practice. For example, the American Manufacturing Trade Action Coalition claims that any rebates or special taxes on imported goods should not be allowed by the rules of the World Trade Organisation. AMTAC claims that so-called "border tax disadvantage" is the greatest contributing factor to the $5.8 trillion US current account deficit for the decade of the 2000s, and estimated this disadvantage to US producers and service providers to be $518 billion in 2008 alone. Some US politicians, such as congressman Bill Pascrell, are advocating either changing WTO rules relating to VAT or rebating VAT charged on US exporters by passing the Border Tax Equity Act.[126] A business tax rebate for exports is also proposed in the 2016 GOP policy paper for tax reform.[127][66] The assertion that this "border adjustment" would be compatible with the rules of the WTO is controversial; it was alleged that the proposed tax would favour domestically produced goods as they would be taxed less than imports, to a degree varying across sectors. For example, the wage component of the cost of domestically produced goods would not be taxed.[128]

A 2021 study in the American Economic Journal found that value- added taxes are unlikely to distort trade flows.[129]

See also

General:

References

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  • Muller, Nichole. 2007. Indian law with emphasis on commercial legal insurance within the scope of a project business in India. IBL Review, VOL. 12, Institute of International Business and law, Germany.
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External links

  •   The dictionary definition of value added tax at Wiktionary

value, added, redirects, here, identifier, value, added, identification, number, other, uses, value, added, known, some, countries, goods, services, type, that, assessed, incrementally, levied, price, product, service, each, stage, production, distribution, sa. VAT redirects here For the identifier for value added tax see VAT identification number For other uses see Vat A value added tax VAT known in some countries as a goods and services tax GST is a type of tax that is assessed incrementally It is levied on the price of a product or service at each stage of production distribution or sale to the end consumer If the ultimate consumer is a business that collects and pays to the government VAT on its products or services it can reclaim the tax paid It is similar to and is often compared with a sales tax VAT is an indirect tax because the person who ultimately bears the burden of the tax is not necessarily the same person as the one who pays the tax to the tax authorities A map of countries and territories by their VAT status 2019 No VAT VATNot all localities require VAT to be charged and exports are often exempt VAT is usually implemented as a destination based tax where the tax rate is based on the location of the consumer and applied to the sales price The terms VAT GST and the more general consumption tax are sometimes used interchangeably VAT raises about a fifth of total tax revenues both worldwide and among the members of the Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development OECD 1 14 As of June 2023 175 2 of the 193 countries with full UN membership employ a VAT including all OECD members except the United States 1 14 where many states use a sales tax system instead There are two main methods of calculating VAT the credit invoice or invoice based method and the subtraction or accounts based method In the credit invoice method sales transactions are taxed the customer is informed of the VAT on the transaction and businesses may receive a credit for the VAT paid on input materials and services The credit invoice method is by far the more common and is used by all national VATs except for Japan In the subtraction method a business at the end of a reporting period calculates the value of all taxable sales subtracts the sum of all taxable purchases and applies the VAT rate to the difference The subtraction method VAT is currently used only by Japan although it often by using the name flat tax has been part of many recent tax reform proposals by US politicians 3 4 5 With both methods there are exceptions in the calculation method for certain goods and transactions that are created to help collection or to counter tax fraud and evasion Contents 1 History 2 Overview 3 Implementation 4 Incentives 4 1 VAT Refunds 5 Registration 6 Comparison with income tax 7 Comparison with sales tax 8 Examples 8 1 Without any tax 8 2 With a sales tax 8 3 With a value added tax 8 4 Limitations to the examples 8 5 Limitations of VAT 9 Imports and exports 9 1 Example 10 Around the world 10 1 Armenia 10 2 Australia 10 3 Bangladesh 10 4 Barbados 10 5 Bulgaria 10 6 Canada 10 7 Chile 10 8 China 10 9 European Union 10 10 Gulf Cooperation Council 10 11 India 10 12 Indonesia 10 13 Italy 10 14 Israel 10 15 Japan 10 16 Malaysia 10 17 Mexico 10 18 Nepal 10 19 New Zealand 10 20 The Nordic countries 10 21 Philippines 10 22 Russia 10 23 Singapore 10 24 Spain 10 24 1 General VAT 10 24 2 Reduced VAT 10 24 3 Super reduced VAT 10 25 South Africa 10 26 Switzerland and Liechtenstein 10 27 Taiwan 10 28 Trinidad and Tobago 10 29 Ukraine 10 30 United Kingdom 10 31 United States 10 31 1 Discussions about a federal VAT 10 32 Vietnam 11 Tax rates 12 Examples by continent 12 1 European Union countries 12 2 Non European Union countries 12 3 VAT free countries and territories 13 Criticisms 13 1 Deadweight loss 13 2 Risk of fraud criticism 13 3 Churning 13 4 Cashflow impacts 13 5 Compliance costs 13 6 Trade criticism 14 See also 15 References 15 1 Scholarly sources 16 External linksHistoryGermany and France were the first countries to implement a VAT doing so in the form of a general consumption tax during World War I 6 The modern variation of VAT was first implemented by France in 1954 in Ivory Coast Cote d Ivoire colony Recognizing the experiment as successful the French introduced it in 1958 6 Maurice Laure Joint Director of the France Tax Authority the Direction Generale des Impots implemented VAT on 10 April 1954 although German industrialist Wilhelm von Siemens proposed the concept in 1918 Initially directed at large businesses it was extended over time to include all business sectors In France it is the most important source of state finance accounting for nearly 50 of state revenues 7 A 2017 study found that the adoption of VAT is strongly linked to countries with corporatist institutions 6 Overview nbsp A Belgian VAT receiptThe amount of VAT is decided by the state as a percentage of the price of the goods or services provided As its name suggests value added tax is designed to tax only the value added by a business on top of the services and goods it can purchase from the market To understand what this means consider a production process e g take away coffee starting from coffee beans where products get successively more valuable at each stage of the process Each VAT registered company in the chain will charge VAT as a percentage of the selling price and will reclaim the VAT paid to purchase relevant products and services the effect is that net VAT is paid on the value added When an end consumer makes a purchase subject to VAT which is not in this case refundable they are paying VAT for the entire production process e g the purchase of the coffee beans their transportation processing cultivation etc since VAT is always included in the prices The VAT collected by the state from each company is the difference between the VAT on sales and the VAT on purchase of goods and services upon which the product depends i e the net value added by the company ImplementationSee also Comparison of cash method and accrual method of accounting The standard way to implement a value added tax involves assuming a business owes some fraction on the price of the product minus all taxes previously paid on the good By the method of collection VAT can be accounts based or invoice based 8 Under the invoice method of collection each seller charges VAT rate on his output and passes the buyer a special invoice that indicates the amount of tax charged Buyers who are subject to VAT on their own sales output tax consider the tax on the purchase invoices as input tax and can deduct the sum from their own VAT liability The difference between output tax and input tax is paid to the government or a refund is claimed in the case of negative liability Under the accounts based method no such specific invoices are used Instead the tax is calculated on the value added measured as a difference between revenues and allowable purchases Most countries today use the invoice method the only exception being Japan which uses the accounts method By the timing of collection 9 VAT as well as accounting in general can be either accrual or cash based Cash basis accounting is a very simple form of accounting When a payment is received for the sale of goods or services a deposit is made and the revenue is recorded as of the date of the receipt of funds no matter when the sale had been made Cheques are written when funds are available to pay bills and the expense is recorded as of the cheque date regardless of when the expense had been incurred The primary focus is on the amount of cash in the bank and the secondary focus is on making sure all bills are paid Little effort is made to match revenues to the time period in which they are earned or to match expenses to the time period in which they are incurred Accrual basis accounting matches revenues to the time period in which they are earned and matches expenses to the time period in which they are incurred While it is more complex than cash basis accounting it provides much more information about your business The accrual basis allows you to track receivables amounts due from customers on credit sales and payables amounts due to vendors on credit purchases The accrual basis allows you to match revenues to the expenses incurred in earning them giving you more meaningful financial reports IncentivesThe main reason that VAT has been successfully adopted in 116 countries as of 2020 10 is that it provides an incentive for businesses to both register and keep invoices and it does this in the form of zero rated goods and VAT exemption on goods not resold 11 Through registration a business effectively receives a VAT waiver on goods purchased for its own use VAT Refunds Many countries offer VAT refunds to international travellers both individual and business travellers While VAT refunds are commonly utilized by tourists the process for business travellers to reclaim VAT can be more complex As a result eligible refunds for business travel are often left unclaimed Some countries particularly in Western Europe offer VAT refunds on business related expenses to encourage the hosting of business meetings events and conferences within their borders These refunds often extend to costs incurred during trade fairs and exhibitions In certain countries VAT paid on meals and fuel may also be eligible for a refund RegistrationIn general countries that have a VAT system require most businesses to be registered for VAT purposes VAT registered businesses can be natural persons or legal entities but countries may have different thresholds or regulations specifying at which turnover levels registration becomes compulsory VAT registered businesses are required to add VAT on goods and services that they supply to others with some exceptions which vary by country and account for the VAT to the taxing authority after deducting the VAT that they paid on the goods and services they acquired from other VAT registered businesses Comparison with income taxLike an income tax VAT is based on the increase in value of a product or service at each stage of production or distribution However there are some important differences 12 A VAT is usually collected by the end retailer Therefore even though VAT is actually incurred by all stages of production and distribution it is frequently compared to a sales tax A VAT is usually a flat tax For VAT purposes an importer is assumed to have contributed 100 of the value of a product imported from outside of the VAT zone The importer incurs VAT on the entire value of the product and this cannot be refunded even if the foreign manufacturer paid other forms of income tax This is in contrast to the US income tax system which allows businesses to expense costs paid to foreign manufacturers For this reason VAT is often considered by US manufacturers to be a trade barrier as further discussed below Comparison with sales taxValue added tax avoids the cascade effect of sales tax by taxing only the value added at each stage of production For this reason throughout the world VAT has been gaining favor over traditional sales taxes In principle VAT applies to all provisions of goods and services VAT is assessed and collected on the value of goods or services that have been provided every time there is a transaction sale purchase The seller charges VAT to the buyer and the seller pays this VAT to the government If however the purchasers are not the end users but the goods or services purchased are costs to their business the tax they have paid for such purchases can be deducted from the tax they charge to their customers The government receives only the difference in other words it is paid tax on the gross margin of each transaction by each participant in the sales chain A sales tax incentivizes vertical integration and therefore discourages specialization and trade due to the fact that it taxes the full value of the product at each stage of production instead of only the value that has been added to the product In many developing countries such as India sales tax VAT are key revenue sources as high unemployment and low per capita income render other income sources inadequate However there is strong opposition to this by many sub national governments as it leads to an overall reduction in the revenue they collect as well as of some autonomy In theory sales tax is normally charged on end users consumers The VAT mechanism means that the end user tax is the same as it would be with a sales tax The main disadvantage of VAT is the extra accounting required by those in the middle of the supply chain this is balanced by the simplicity of not requiring a set of rules to determine who is and is not considered an end user When the VAT system has few if any exemptions such as with GST in New Zealand payment of VAT is even simpler 13 A general economic idea is that if sales taxes are high enough people start engaging in widespread tax evading activity On the other hand total VAT rates can rise above 10 without widespread evasion because of its collection mechanism However because of its particular mechanism of collection VAT is targeted by specific frauds like carousel fraud which can be very expensive in terms of loss of tax incomes for states ExamplesConsider the manufacture and sale of any item which in this case is a widget In what follows the term gross margin is used rather than profit Profit is the remainder of what is left after paying other costs such as rent and personnel costs Without any tax nbsp Without any taxA widget manufacturer for example spends 1 00 on raw materials and uses them to make a widget The widget is sold wholesale to a widget retailer for 1 20 leaving a gross margin of 0 20 The widget retailer then sells the widget to a widget consumer for 1 50 leaving a gross margin of 0 30 With a sales tax With a 10 sales tax tax amount in bold nbsp With a 10 sales taxThe manufacturer spends 1 00 for the raw materials certifying it is not a final consumer The manufacturer charges the retailer 1 20 checking that the retailer is not a consumer leaving the same gross margin of 0 20 The retailer charges the consumer 1 50 1 10 1 65 and pays the government 0 15 leaving the gross margin of 0 30 So the consumer has paid 10 0 15 extra compared to the no taxation scheme and the government has collected this amount in taxation The retailers have not paid any tax directly it is the consumer who has paid the tax but the retailer has to do the paperwork in order to correctly pass on to the government the sales tax it has collected Suppliers and manufacturers have the administrative burden of supplying correct state exemption certifications which the retailer must verify and maintain The manufacturer is also responsible for making sure that their customers retailers are only intermediates and not end consumers otherwise the manufacturer itself would need to charge the tax In addition the retailer must keep track of what is taxable and what is not along with the various tax rates in each of the cities counties and states for the 35 000 global taxing jurisdictions With a value added tax With a 10 VAT tax amounts in bold nbsp With a 10 VATThe manufacturer spends 1 1 10 1 10 for the raw materials and the seller of the raw materials pays the government 0 10 The manufacturer charges the retailer 1 20 1 10 1 32 and pays the government 0 12 minus 0 10 0 02 leaving the same gross margin of 1 32 1 10 0 02 0 20 The retailer charges the consumer 1 50 1 10 1 65 and pays the government 0 15 minus 0 12 0 03 leaving the same gross margin of 1 65 1 32 0 03 0 30 The manufacturer and retailer realize less gross margin from a percentage perspective If the cost of raw material production were shown this would also be true of the raw material supplier s gross margin on a percentage basis Note that the taxes paid by both the manufacturer and the retailer to the government are 10 of the values added by their respective business practices e g the value added by the manufacturer is 1 20 minus 1 00 thus the tax payable by the manufacturer is 1 20 1 00 10 0 02 In the VAT example above the consumer has paid and the government received the same dollar amount as with a sales tax At each stage of the production the seller collects a tax on behalf of the government and the buyer pays for the tax by paying a higher price The buyer can then be reimbursed for paying the tax but only by successfully selling the value added product to the buyer or consumer in the next stage In the previously shown examples if the retailer fails to sell some of its inventory it suffers a greater financial loss in the VAT scheme in comparison to the sales tax regulatory system by having paid a higher wholesale price on the product it wants to sell Each business is responsible for handling the necessary paperwork in order to pass on to the government the VAT it collected on its gross margin The businesses are freed from any obligation to request certifications from purchasers who are not end users and of providing such certifications to their suppliers but they incur increased accounting costs for collecting the tax which are not reimbursed by the taxing authority For example wholesale companies now have to hire staff and accountants to handle the VAT paperwork which would not be required if they were collecting sales tax instead Limitations to the examples In the above examples we assumed that the same number of widgets were made and sold both before and after the introduction of the tax This is not true in real life The supply and demand economic model suggests that any tax raises the cost of transaction for someone whether it is the seller or purchaser In raising the cost either the demand curve shifts rightward or the supply curve shifts upward The two are functionally equivalent Consequently the quantity of a good purchased decreases and or the price for which it is sold increases This shift in supply and demand is not incorporated into the above example for simplicity and because these effects are different for every type of good The above example assumes the tax is non distortionary Limitations of VAT nbsp A supply demand analysis of a taxed marketA VAT like most taxes distorts what would have happened without it Because the price for someone rises the quantity of goods traded decreases Correspondingly some people are worse off by more than the government is made better off by tax income That is more is lost due to supply and demand shifts than is gained in tax This is known as a deadweight loss If the income lost by the economy is greater than the government s income the tax is inefficient VAT and a non VAT have the same implications on the microeconomic model The entire amount of the government s income the tax revenue may not be a deadweight drag if the tax revenue is used for productive spending or has positive externalities in other words governments may do more than simply consume the tax income While distortions occur consumption taxes like VAT are often considered superior because they distort incentives to invest save and work less than most other types of taxation in other words a VAT discourages consumption rather than production In the diagram on the right Deadweight loss the area of the triangle formed by the tax income box the original supply curve and the demand curve Government s tax income the grey rectangle captioned Tax Revenue Total consumer surplus after the shift the green area Total producer surplus after the shift the yellow areaImports and exportsBeing a consumption tax VAT is usually used as a replacement for sales tax Ultimately it taxes the same people and businesses the same amounts of money despite its internal mechanism being different There is a significant difference between VAT and sales tax for goods that are imported and exported VAT is charged for a commodity that is exported while sales tax is not Sales tax is paid for the full price of the imported commodity while VAT is expected to be charged only for value added to this commodity by the importer and the reseller This means that without special measures goods will be taxed twice if they are exported from one country that does have VAT to another country that has sales tax instead Conversely goods that are imported from a VAT free country into another country with VAT will result in no sales tax and only a fraction of the usual VAT There are also significant differences in taxation for goods that are being imported exported between countries with different systems or rates of VAT Sales tax does not have those problems it is charged in the same way for both imported and domestic goods and it is never charged twice To fix this problem nearly all countries that use VAT use special rules for imported and exported goods All imported goods are charged VAT for their full price when they are sold for the first time All exported goods are exempted from any VAT payments For these reasons VAT on imports and VAT rebates on exports form a common practice approved by the World Trade Organization WTO citation needed Example In Germany a product is sold to a German reseller for 2 500 VAT 3 000 The German reseller will claim the VAT back from the state the refund time change in base of local laws and states and will then charge the VAT to the customer In the USA a product is sold to another US reseller for 2 500 without the sales tax with a certificate of exemption The US reseller will charge the sales tax to the customer Note The VAT system adopted in Europe affects company cashflow due to compliance costs 14 and fraud risk for governments due to overclaimed taxes citation needed It s different for B2B sales between countries where will be applied the reverse charge no VAT charged or sales tax exemption in case of B2C sales the seller should pay the VAT or sales tax to the consumer state creating a controversial situation by asking to a foreign company to pay taxes of their taxable residents citizens without jurisdiction on seller Around the world nbsp VAT rate by country No VAT 5 10 15 20 25 Armenia Main article Taxation in Armenia In Armenia the value added tax VAT is 20 However the expanded application is zero VAT for many operations and transactions in Armenia That zero VAT is the source of controversies between the trade partners and Armenia mainly between Russia which is against the zero VAT and promotes wider use of tax credits VAT is replaced with fixed payments which are utilized for many taxpayers operations and transactions The present VAT legislation in Armenia is based largely on the EU VAT Directive s principles 15 The VAT system in Armenia is input output based Companies who have registered for VAT are allowed to subtract the VAT on their inputs from the VAT they charged on their sales and report the difference to the tax authorities 15 VAT is purchased quarterly However it is an exception when taxpayers state monthly payments VAT is disbursed to the state s budget until the 20th day of the month after the tax period 16 It came into effect on January 1 2022 The draft law on the VAT plans were passed on November 11 2021 and the plans were accepted on November 17 17 Australia Main article Goods and services tax Australia The goods and services tax GST is a value added tax introduced in Australia in 2000 which is collected by the Australian Tax Office The revenue is then redistributed to the states and territories via the Commonwealth Grants Commission process In essence this is Australia s program of horizontal fiscal equalisation Whilst the rate is currently set at 10 there are many domestically consumed items that are effectively zero rated GST free such as fresh food education and health services certain medical products as well as exemptions for Government charges and fees that are themselves in the nature of taxes Bangladesh Main article Taxation in Bangladesh Value added tax VAT in Bangladesh was introduced in 1991 replacing sales tax and most excise duties The Value Added Tax Act 1991 was enacted that year and VAT started its passage from 10 July 1991 In Bangladesh 10 July is observed as National VAT Day Within the passage of 25 years VAT has become the largest source of Government Revenue About 56 of total tax revenue is VAT revenue in Bangladesh Standard VAT rate is 15 Export is zero rated Besides these rates there are several reduced rates locally called Truncated Rates for service sectors ranging from 1 5 to 10 To increase the productivity of VAT the Government enacted the Value Added Tax and Supplementary Duty Act of 2012 This law was initially scheduled to operate online with an automated administration from 1 July 2017 however this pilot project was extended for another two years 18 The National Board of Revenue NBR of the Ministry of Finance of the Government of Bangladesh is the apex organization administering the value added tax Relevant rules and acts include Value Added Tax Act 1991 19 20 21 22 Value Added Tax and Supplementary Duty Act 2012 20 Development Surcharge and Levy Imposition and Collection Act 2015 23 and Value Added Tax and Supplementary Duty Rules 2016 24 Anyone who is selling a product and collects VAT from buyers becomes a VAT Trustee if they register their business and collect a Business Identification Number BIN from the NBR submit VAT returns on time offer VAT receipts to consumers store all cash memos and use the VAT rebate system responsibly Anyone who works in the VAT or Customs department in the NBR and deals with VAT trustees is a VAT Mentor The flat rate of VAT is 15 Barbados Main article Economy of Barbados Taxation VAT in Barbados was introduced on 1 January 1997 and replaced 11 other different taxes 25 It was originally introduced at a rate of 15 but was later increased to a rate of 17 5 on most goods and services in 2011 26 VAT on restaurant and hotel accommodations between 10 and 15 while no tax is levied on certain foods and goods listed by the government 27 The revenue is collected by the Barbados Revenue Authority 28 Bulgaria Main article Taxation in Bulgaria Value added tax VAT in Bulgarian is currently 20 as of 2023 The reduced VAT rate of 9 on baby foods and hygiene products as well as on books is made permanent it was due to expire at the end of 2022 A permanent reduced VAT rate of 9 will also apply to physical or electronic periodicals such as newspapers and magazines as of 1 January 2023 Canada Main articles Goods and services tax Canada and Harmonized sales tax Goods and Services Tax GST is a sales tax introduced by the Federal Government in 1991 at a rate of 7 later reduced to the current rate of 5 A Harmonized Sales Tax HST that combines the GST and provincial sales tax together is collected in New Brunswick 15 Newfoundland 15 Nova Scotia 15 Ontario 13 and Prince Edward Island 15 while British Columbia had a 12 HST from 2010 until 2013 Quebec has a de facto 14 975 HST its provincial sales tax follows the same rules as the GST and both are collected together by Revenu Quebec Advertised and posted prices generally exclude taxes which are calculated at the time of payment common exceptions are motor fuels the posted prices for which include sales and excise taxes and items in vending machines as well as alcohol in monopoly stores Basic groceries prescription drugs inward outbound transportation and medical devices are exempt Other provinces that do not have a HST may have a Provincial Sales Tax PST PSTs are collected in British Columbia 7 Manitoba 7 and Saskatchewan 6 The province of Alberta and all three territories do not collect either a HST or PST Chile VAT in Chile was introduced in 1974 through the Decreto Ley 825 29 Since 2003 the standard rate of VAT is 19 This tax makes the 41 2 of the total revenue of the country 30 China Main article Taxation in China VAT was implemented in China in 1984 and is administered by the State Administration of Taxation In 2007 the revenue from VAT was 15 47 billion yuan 2 2 billion which made up 33 9 percent of China s total tax revenue for the year dubious discuss The standard rate of VAT in China is 13 There is a reduced rate of 9 that applies to products such as books and types of oils and 6 for services except for PPE lease 31 European Union Main article European Union value added tax The European Union value added tax EU VAT covers consumption of goods and services and is mandatory for member states of the European Union The EU VAT s key issue asks where the supply and consumption occurs thereby determining which member state will collect the VAT and which VAT rate will be charged Each member state s national VAT legislation must comply with the provisions of EU VAT law 32 which requires a minimum standard rate of 15 and one or two reduced rates not to be below 5 Some EU members have a 0 VAT rate on certain supplies these states would have agreed this as part of their EU Accession Treaty for example newspapers and certain magazines in Belgium Certain goods and services must be exempt from VAT for example postal services medical care lending insurance betting and certain other goods and services to be exempt from VAT but subject to the ability of an EU member state to opt to charge VAT on those supplies such as land and certain financial services The highest rate currently in operation in the EU is 27 Hungary though member states are free to set higher rates There is in fact only one EU country Denmark that does not have a reduced rate of VAT 33 There are some areas of member states both overseas and on the European continent which are outside the EU VAT area and some non EU states that are inside the EU VAT area External areas may have no VAT or may have a rate lower than 15 Goods and services supplied from external areas to internal areas are considered imported See EU VAT area EU VAT area for a full listing VAT that is charged by a business and paid by its customers is known as output VAT that is VAT on its output supplies VAT that is paid by a business to other businesses on the supplies that it receives is known as input VAT that is VAT on its input supplies A business is generally able to recover input VAT to the extent that the input VAT is attributable to that is used to make its taxable outputs Input VAT is recovered by setting it against the output VAT for which the business is required to account to the government or if there is an excess by claiming a repayment from the government Private people are generally allowed to buy goods in any member country and bring it home and pay only the VAT to the seller Input VAT that is attributable to VAT exempt supplies example needed is not recoverable although a business can increase its prices so the customer effectively bears the cost of the sticking VAT the effective rate will be lower than the headline rate and depend on the balance between previously taxed input and labour at the exempt stage Gulf Cooperation Council Main article Gulf Cooperation Council Increased growth and pressure on the GCC s governments to provide infrastructure to support growing urban centers the Member States of the Gulf Co operation Council GCC which together make up the Gulf Co operation Council GCC have felt the need to introduce a tax system in the region In particular the United Arab Emirates UAE on 1 January 2018 implemented VAT For companies whose annual revenues exceed 102 000 Dhs 375 000 registration is mandatory Oman s Minister of Financial Affairs indicated that GCC countries have agreed the introductory rate of VAT is 5 34 35 36 The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia VAT system was implemented on 1 January 2018 at 5 rate However on 11 May 2020 the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia announced to increase the VAT from 5 to 15 as of 1 July 2020 due to the effects of the Corona pandemic and the decline in oil prices 37 India Further information Value added taxation in India VAT was introduced into the Indian taxation system from 1 April 2005 Of the then 28 Indian states eight did not introduce VAT at first instance There is uniform VAT rate of 5 and 14 5 all over India The government of Tamil Nadu introduced an act by the name Tamil Nadu Value Added Tax Act 2006 which came into effect from 1 January 2007 It was also known as the TN VAT Under the BJP government a new national Goods and Services Tax was introduced under the One Hundred and First Amendment of the Constitution of India Indonesia Further information Taxation in Indonesia Value added tax VAT was introduced into the Indonesian taxation system from 1 April 1985 General VAT rate is ten percent There are currently plans to raise the standard VAT rate to 12 Using indirect subtraction method with invoice to calculate value added tax payable VAT was Collected by the Directorate General of Taxation Ministry of Finance Some goods and services are exempt from VAT like basic commodities vital to the general public medical or health services religion services educational services and Services provided by the government in respect of carrying out general governmental administration Italy Main article Taxation in Italy The Italian Government used to apply a full value multi phase tax on sales IGE but it switched in 1973 to the more efficient IVA an indirect multi phase tax on the Added Value It uses a system of compensation Debit Credit Tax and companies pay the tax on the good and services they buy However they can deduct it bringing it to compensation with the taxes they collect form their client In the end the system allows to apply a final taxation to the consumer of a fixed amount regardless of the taxation applied during the production process The percentages are 4 for essential goods and services 10 for medicine and some foodstuffs 22 for ordinary goods and services Israel Further information Taxation in Israel Value added tax VAT was first imposed in Israel on 1 July 1976 by virtue of the Value Added Tax Law following the recommendations of the Asher Committee which dealt with this matter during the first Rabin government The initial rate of VAT was 8 From June 2013 to September 2015 the VAT rate was 18 percent Since then the VAT rate in Israel has been 17 Japan Further information Taxation in Japan Consumption tax 消費税 shōhizei in Japan is 8 which consists of a national tax rate of 6 3 and a local tax of 1 7 38 39 It is usually but not always included in posted prices From 1 October 2019 the tax rate is proposed to increase to 10 for most goods while groceries and other basic necessities will remain at 8 40 Malaysia Main article Goods and Services Tax Malaysia The goods and services tax GST is a value added tax introduced in Malaysia in 2015 which is collected by the Royal Malaysian Customs Department The standard rate is currently set at 6 Many domestically consumed items such as fresh foods water electricity and land public transportation are zero rated while some supplies such as education and health services are GST exempted After being revised by the newly elected government after the General Election 14 GST will be removed across Malaysia from 1 June 2018 onwards As of 8 August 2018 the goods and services tax GST has been abolished and replaced by sales and services tax SST under the new government which promised to do so in their manifesto 41 42 The new SST or SST 2 0 is on track to be rolled out on 1 September 2018 Former Finance Minister Lim Guan Eng said that failure to do so would result in an operating deficit of RM4 billion approximately 969 million in USD for the Malaysian government 43 Under the new tax system selected items will be subjected to a 5 or 10 tax while services will be subjected to a 6 tax Mexico Value added tax Spanish Impuesto al Valor Agregado IVA is a tax applied in Mexico and other countries of Latin America In Chile it is also called Impuesto al Valor Agregado and in Peru it is called Impuesto General a las Ventas or IGV Prior to the IVA a sales tax Spanish impuesto a las ventas had been applied in Mexico In September 1966 the first attempt to apply the IVA took place when revenue experts declared that the IVA should be a modern equivalent of the sales tax as it occurred in France At the convention of the Inter American Center of Revenue Administrators in April and May 1967 the Mexican representation declared that the application of a value added tax would not be possible in Mexico at the time In November 1967 other experts declared that although this is one of the most equitable indirect taxes its application in Mexico could not take place In response to these statements direct sampling of members in the private sector took place as well as field trips to European countries where this tax was applied or soon to be applied In 1969 the first attempt to substitute the mercantile revenue tax for the value added tax took place On 29 December 1978 the Federal government published the official application of the tax beginning on 1 January 1980 in the Official Journal of the Federation As of 2010 the general VAT rate was 16 This rate was applied all over Mexico except for bordering regions i e the United States border or Belize and Guatemala where the rate was 11 The main exemptions are for books food and medicines on a 0 basis Also some services are exempt like a doctor s medical attention In 2014 Mexico Tax Reforms eliminated the favorable tax rate for border regions and increased the VAT to 16 across the country Nepal Further information Value added tax Nepal VAT was implemented in 1998 and is the major source of government revenue It is administered by Inland Revenue Department of Nepal Nepal has been levying two rates of VAT Normal 13 and zero rate In addition some goods and services are exempt from VAT New Zealand Main article Goods and Services Tax New Zealand The goods and services tax GST is a value added tax that was introduced in New Zealand in 1986 currently levied at 15 It is notable for exempting few items from the tax From July 1989 to September 2010 GST was levied at 12 5 and prior to that at 10 The Nordic countries MOMS Danish mervaerdiafgift formerly meromsaetningsafgift Norwegian merverdiavgift bokmal or meirverdiavgift nynorsk abbreviated MVA Swedish Mervardes och OMSattningsskatt until the early 1970s labeled as OMS OMSattningsskatt only Icelandic virdisaukaskattur abbreviated VSK Faroese meirvirdisgjald abbreviated MVG or Finnish arvonlisavero abbreviated ALV are the Nordic terms for VAT Like other countries sales and VAT it is an indirect tax Year Tax level Denmark Name1962 9 OMS1967 10 MOMS1968 12 5658 MOMS1970 15 MOMS1977 18 MOMS1978 20 25 MOMS1980 22 MOMS1992 25 MOMSIn Denmark VAT is generally applied at one rate and with few exceptions is not split into two or more rates as in other countries e g Germany where reduced rates apply to essential goods such as foodstuffs The current standard rate of VAT in Denmark is 25 That makes Denmark one of the countries with the highest value added tax alongside Norway Sweden and Croatia A number of services have reduced VAT citation needed for instance public transportation of private persons health care services publishing newspapers rent of premises the lessor can though voluntarily register as VAT payer except for residential premises and travel agency operations In Finland the standard rate of VAT is 24 as of 1 January 2013 raised from previous 23 along with all other VAT rates excluding the zero rate 44 In addition two reduced rates are in use 14 up from previous 13 starting 1 January 2013 which is applied on food and animal feed and 10 increased from 9 1 January 2013 which is applied on passenger transportation services cinema performances physical exercise services books pharmaceuticals entrance fees to commercial cultural and entertainment events and facilities Supplies of some goods and services are exempt under the conditions defined in the Finnish VAT Act hospital and medical care social welfare services educational financial and insurance services lotteries and money games transactions concerning bank notes and coins used as legal tender real property including building land certain transactions carried out by blind persons and interpretation services for deaf persons The seller of these tax exempt services or goods is not subject to VAT and does not pay tax on sales Such sellers therefore may not deduct VAT included in the purchase prices of his inputs Aland an autonomous area is considered to be outside the EU VAT area even if its VAT rate is the same as for Finland Goods brought from Aland to Finland or other EU countries are considered to be export import goods This enables tax free sales onboard passenger ships In Iceland VAT is split into two levels 24 for most goods and services but 11 for certain goods and services The 11 level is applied for hotel and guesthouse stays licence fees for radio stations namely RUV newspapers and magazines books hot water electricity and oil for heating houses food for human consumption but not alcoholic beverages access to toll roads and music 45 In Norway VAT is split into three levels 25 general rate 15 on foodstuffs and 12 on the supply of passenger transport services and the procurement of such services on the letting of hotel rooms and holiday homes and on transport services regarding the ferrying of vehicles as part of the domestic road network The same rate applies to cinema tickets and to the previous television licence abolished in January 2020 46 Financial services health services social services and educational services are all outside the scope of the VAT Act 47 Newspapers books and periodicals are zero rated 48 Svalbard has no VAT because of a clause in the Svalbard Treaty In Sweden VAT is split into three levels 25 for most goods and services 12 for foods including restaurants bills and hotel stays and 6 for printed matter cultural services and transport of private persons Some services are not taxable for example education of children and adults if public utility and health and dental care but education is taxable at 25 in case of courses for adults at a private school Dance events for the guests have 25 concerts and stage shows have 6 and some types of cultural events have 0 MOMS replaced OMS Danish omsaetningsafgift Swedish omsattningsskatt in 1967 which was a tax applied exclusively for retailers Philippines The current VAT rate in the Philippines stands at 12 Like in most other countries the amount of tax is included in the final sales price Senior citizens are however exempted from paying VAT for most goods and some services that are for their personal consumption They will need to show a government issued ID card that establishes their age at the till to avail of the exemption Russia Further information Taxation in Russia According to the Russian tax code the value added tax is levied at the rate of 20 for all goods with several exemptions for several types of products and services like medicare etc Taxpayers of value added tax are recognized Organizations industrial and financial state and municipal enterprises institutions business partnerships insurance companies and banks enterprises with foreign investments individual entrepreneurs international associations and foreign legal entities that carry out entrepreneurial activities in the territory of the Russian Federation non commercial organizations in the event of their commercial activities and persons recognized as taxpayers of value added tax in connection with the movement of goods across the customs border of the Customs Union 49 50 51 Singapore VAT is known as the Goods and Services Tax GST in Singapore It was first introduced in 1994 at 3 which was among the lowest in the world as the focus was not to generate substantial revenue but to allow Singaporeans to get adjusted to the tax 52 On 15 February 2007 Second Minister for Finance Tharman Shanmugaratnam announced that the GST rate would be increased to 7 from 1 July 2007 On 19 February 2018 Finance Minister Heng Swee Keat announced that the GST will be increased to 9 sometime between 2021 and 2025 to help spend more on healthcare infrastructure and security On 18 February 2022 Finance Minister Lawrence Wong announced that the GST will rise from 7 to 9 in two stages in 2023 and 2024 to help to cushion the increase 53 Spain In Spain the VAT law has categorized goods and services into three types based on function with according tax percentages These three types of VAT are general VAT reduced VAT and super reduced VAT However there are some goods to which this tax is not applied General VAT This VAT is 21 This tax is the most common in the country because it is applied to any good or service made or performed in Spain This percentage is from September 2018 Before that the percentage was 18 and two years before that it was 16 Reduced VAT This VAT is 10 and applies to foods except staple foods It is also applied to hostelry services passenger transport and real estate sales Specifically this tax applies to Food products for human or animal consumption except alcoholic beverages to which general VAT is applied Goods or services related to forestry livestock or agricultural activities fertilizers seeds herbicides Water both drinking and irrigation Devices intended to replace physical deficiencies glasses contact lenses prostheses Products equipment instruments and sanitary materials intended for the treatment prevention or diagnosis of diseases including medicines for use in animals and pharmaceutical products for direct use without medical prescription Sale and reforms or repairs of real estate homes garages annexes Leases with option to purchase real estate Transportation of passengers and their luggage by land sea or air Hotel and restaurant activities and all food and drink supplies Health and dental care activities 54 Super reduced VAT In this group is essential goods For that reason this VAT is 4 The different goods to which this percentage is applied are Basic food products bread flour milk eggs cheese fruits vegetables cereals tubers and legumes Medications intended for human use as well as medicinal substances and all the intermediate products used to obtain them Press and books with content that is not exclusively promotional or advertising Motor vehicles intended for the use of people with reduced mobility Prosthetics and internal implants for people with some degree of disability Official protection housing delivered by the property developer Rental operations with purchase option on the Official protection housing Home help services resistance residential care and day centers Nevertheless there are some products that VAT is not assessed on These goods and services are Insurance reinsurance and capitalization operations Mediation services for natural persons Financial products but not financial advisory services Post stamps Leasing operations of Official protection housing destined to be habitual residence as opposed to renting by companies Professional medical and health care Approved teaching given in official centers public or private as well as private training on approved subjects South Africa Value added tax VAT in South Africa was set at a rate of 14 and remained unchanged since 1993 Finance Minister Malusi Gigaba announced on 21 February 2018 that the VAT rate will be increased by one percentage point to 15 Some basic food stuffs as well as paraffin will remain zero rated The new rate is to be effective from 1 April 2018 55 Switzerland and Liechtenstein Further information Taxation in Switzerland Value added tax Switzerland has a customs union with Liechtenstein that also includes the German exclave of Busingen am Hochrhein The Switzerland Liechtenstein VAT area has a general rate of 7 7 and a reduced rate of 2 5 A special rate of 3 7 is in use in the hotel industry 56 Taiwan Main article Taxation in Taiwan Value added tax VAT in Taiwan is currently 5 as of 1 June 2023 Trinidad and Tobago Value added tax VAT in T amp T is currently 12 5 as of 1 February 2016 Before that date VAT used to be at 15 Ukraine In Ukraine the revenue to state budget from VAT is the most significant Under the Ukrainian tax code there are three VAT rates 57 20 general tax rate applied to most goods and services 7 special tax rate applied mostly to medicines and medical products import and trade operations and 0 special tax rate applied mostly to export of goods and services international transport of passengers baggage and cargo United Kingdom Further information Value added tax in the United Kingdom The default VAT rate is the standard rate 20 since 4 January 2011 Some goods and services are subject to VAT at a reduced rate of 5 or 0 Others are exempt from VAT Due to COVID 19 the United Kingdom temporarily reduced the VAT on tourism and hospitality These sectors had a reduced 5 VAT rate until 30 September 2021 Between 1 October 2021 and 31 March 2022 the VAT rate then raised to 12 5 From 1 April 2022 the VAT rate returned to the standard 20 United States Further information Sales taxes in the United States In the United States currently there is no federal value added tax VAT on goods or services Instead a sales and use tax is used in most US states VATs have been the subject of much scholarship in the US and are one of the most contentious tax policy topics 58 59 In 2015 Puerto Rico passed legislation to replace its 6 sales and use tax with a 10 5 VAT beginning 1 April 2016 although the 1 municipal sales and use tax will remain and notably materials imported for manufacturing will be exempted 60 61 In doing so Puerto Rico will become the first US jurisdiction to adopt a value added tax 61 62 However two states have previously enacted a form of VAT as a form of business tax in lieu of a business income tax rather than a replacement for a sales and use tax The state of Michigan used a form of VAT known as the Single Business Tax SBT as its form of general business taxation It is the only state in the United States to have used a VAT When it was adopted in 1975 it replaced seven business taxes including a corporate income tax On 9 August 2006 the Michigan Legislature approved voter initiated legislation to repeal the Single Business Tax which was replaced by the Michigan Business Tax on 1 January 2008 63 The state of Hawaii has a 4 General Excise Tax GET that is charged on the gross income of any business entity generating income within the State of Hawaii The State allows businesses to optionally pass on their tax burden by charging their customers a quasi sales tax rate of 4 166 64 The total tax burden on each item sold is more than the 4 166 charged at the register since GET was charged earlier up the sales chain such as manufacturers and wholesalers making the GET less transparent than a retail sales tax citation needed Discussions about a federal VAT This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it February 2016 Soon after President Richard Nixon took office in 1969 it was widely reported that his administration was considering a federal VAT with the revenue to be shared with state and local governments to reduce their reliance on property taxes and to fund education spending citation needed Former 2020 Democratic presidential candidate Andrew Yang advocated for a national VAT in order to pay for universal basic income A national subtraction method VAT often referred to as a flat tax has been part of proposals by many politicians as a replacement of the corporate income tax 3 4 5 A border adjustment tax BAT was proposed by the Republican Party in their 2016 policy paper A Better Way Our Vision for a Confident America 65 which promoted a move to a destination based cash flow tax 66 27 67 DBCFT in part to compensate for the U S lacking a VAT As of March 2017 the Trump Administration was considering including the BAT as part of its tax reform proposal needs update Vietnam Value added tax VAT in Vietnam is a broadly based consumption tax assessed on the value added to goods and services arising through the process of production circulation and consumption It is an indirect tax in Vietnam on domestic consumption applied nationwide rather than at different levels such as state provincial or local taxes It is a multi stage tax which is collected at every stage of the production and distribution chain and passed on to the final customer It is applicable to the majority of goods and services bought and sold for use in the country Goods that are sold for export and services that are sold to customers abroad are normally not subject to VAT citation needed All organizations and individuals producing and trading VAT taxable goods and services in Vietnam have to pay VAT regardless of whether they have Vietnam based resident establishments or not Vietnam has three VAT rates 0 percent 5 percent and 10 percent 10 percent is the standard rate applied to most goods and services unless otherwise stipulated A variety of goods and service transactions may qualify for VAT exemption citation needed Tax rates nbsp Standard VAT or sales tax rate nbsp General government revenue in of GDP from VAT For this data the variance of GDP per capita with purchasing power parity PPP is explained in 3 by tax revenue See also List of countries by tax ratesExamples by continentEuropean Union countries nbsp EU VAT Tax RatesCountry Standard rate current Reduced rate current Abbreviation Local name nbsp Austria 20 68 10 for rental for the purpose of habitation food garbage collection most transportation etc 13 for plants live animals and animal food art wine if bought directly from the winemaker etc 69 MwSt USt MehrwertSteuer UmsatzSteuer nbsp Belgium 21 70 12 or 6 for food or live necessary consumables or 0 in some cases BTW TVA MwSt Belasting over de Toegevoegde Waarde Taxe sur la Valeur Ajoutee MehrwertSteuer nbsp Bulgaria 20 68 9 hotels or 0 DDS Dank Dobavena Ctojnost nbsp Croatia 25 68 13 since 1 January 2014 or 5 since 1 January 2013 PDV Porez na Dodanu Vrijednost nbsp Cyprus 19 71 5 8 for taxi and bus transportation FPA Foros Prosti8emenhs A3ias nbsp Czech Republic 21 68 72 15 food public transport or 10 medicines pharmaceuticals books and baby foodstuffs DPH Dan z pridane hodnoty nbsp Denmark 25 68 73 0 Moms Meromsaetningsafgift nbsp Estonia 20 68 9 Km Kaibemaks nbsp Finland 24 68 14 foodstuffs restaurants or 10 medicines cultural services and events passenger transport hotels books and magazines ALVMoms Arvonlisavero Finnish Mervardesskatt Swedish nbsp France 20 68 10 or 5 5 or 2 1 TVA Taxe sur la Valeur Ajoutee nbsp Germany 19 Heligoland 0 68 74 7 citation needed for foodstuffs except luxury books flowers etc 0 for postage stamps Heligoland always 0 MwSt USt MehrwertSteuer UmsatzSteuer nbsp Greece 24 68 75 16 on Aegean islands 13 6 5 for hotels books and pharmaceutical products 8 and 4 on Aegean islands FPA Foros Prosti8emenhs A3ias nbsp Hungary 27 76 18 milk and dairy products cereal products hotels tickets to outdoor music events or 5 pharmaceutical products medical equipment books and periodicals some meat products district heating heating based on renewable sources live music performance under certain circumstances or 0 postal services medical services mother s milk etc 77 AFA Altalanos Forgalmi Ado nbsp Ireland 23 68 78 13 5 or 9 0 or 4 8 or 0 CBlVAT Cain Bhreisluacha Irish Value Added Tax English nbsp Italy 22 68 Livigno 0 68 10 hotels bars restaurants and other tourism products certain foodstuffs plant protection products and special works of building restoration home use utilities electricity gas used for cooking and water or 4 e g grocery staples daily or periodical press and books works for the elimination of architectural barriers some kinds of seeds fertilizers IVA Imposta sul Valore Aggiunto nbsp Latvia 21 68 12 or 0 PVN Pievienotas Vertibas Nodoklis nbsp Lithuania 21 68 9 or 5 PVM Pridetines Vertes Mokestis nbsp Luxembourg 17 79 14 on certain wines 8 on public utilities or 3 on books and press food including restaurant meals children s clothing hotel stays and public transit 79 TVAMwSt UStMS Taxe sur la Valeur AjouteeMehrwertsteuer UmsatzsteuerMeiwaert Steier nbsp Malta 18 68 7 or 5 or 0 TVMVAT Taxxa tal Valur MizjudValue Added Tax nbsp Netherlands 21 68 9 for special categories of products and services like food medicine and art 0 for products and services that are already taxed in other countries or systems for excise goods and for fish BTW Ob Belasting over de Toegevoegde Waarde Omzetbelasting Voorbelasting nbsp Poland 23 71 80 8 or 5 or 0 PTU Podatek od Towarow i Uslug nbsp Portugal 23 81 82 22 in Madeira and 18 in Azores 81 82 13 for processed food provision of services and others such as oil and diesel climate action focused goods and musical instruments and 6 for food products agricultural services and other deemed essential products such as farmaceutical products and public transport 83 12 or 5 in Madeira and 9 or 4 in Azores 81 82 IVA Imposto sobre o Valor Acrescentado nbsp Romania 19 84 9 food and non alcoholic drinks or 5 buyers of new homes under special conditions TVA Taxa pe Valoarea Adăugată nbsp Slovakia 20 68 10 DPH Dan z Pridanej Hodnoty nbsp Slovenia 22 85 9 5 DDV Davek na Dodano Vrednost nbsp Spain 21 68 7 in Canary Islands not part of EU VAT area 10 10 from 1 September 2012 86 or 4 68 87 3 or 0 in Canary Islands IVAIGIC Impuesto sobre el Valor AnadidoImpuesto General Indirecto Canario nbsp Sweden 25 68 12 e g food hotels and restaurants 6 e g books passenger transport cultural events and activities 0 e g insurance financial services health care dental care prescription drugs immovable property 88 89 MOMS Mervardes och OMSattningsskattNon European Union countries Country Standard rate current Reduced rate current Local name nbsp Albania 90 20 6 accommodation services or 0 postal medical dental and welfare services TVSH Tatimi mbi Vleren e Shtuar nbsp Algeria 19 The reduced VAT rate in Algeria is currently 9 It applies to basic goods and services such as food medicine and transportation nbsp Andorra 91 4 5 1 IGI Impost General Indirecte nbsp Angola 92 7 5 which applies to the import and supply of certain goods products of the Basic Basket listed in Annex I of the VAT Code and agricultural inputs nbsp Antigua and Barbuda 15 nbsp Argentina 21 10 5 or 0 IVA Impuesto al Valor Agregado nbsp Armenia 20 0 AAH Avelacvats Arzheqi Hark ԱԱՀ Ավելացված արժեքի հարկ nbsp Australia 10 0 fresh food medical services medicines and medical devices education services childcare water and sewerage government taxes amp permits and many government charges precious metals second hand goods and many other types of goods Rebates for exported goods and GST taxed business inputs are also available GST Goods and Services Tax nbsp Azerbaijan 18 10 5 or 0 EDV Elave deyer vergisi nbsp Bahamas 93 94 12 12 or 0 including but not limited to exports of goods or services services to a foreign going vessel providing international commercial services consumable goods for commercially scheduled foreign going vessels aircraft copyright etc VAT Value Added Tax nbsp Bahrain 10 0 pharmacies and medical services road transport education service Oil and gas derivatives Vegetables and fruits National exports VAT ضريبة القيمة المضافة nbsp Bangladesh 15 4 for supplier 4 5 for ITES 5 for electricity 5 5 for construction firm etc Musok Mullo songzojon kor ম সক ম ল য স য জন কর nbsp Barbados 17 5 VAT Value Added Tax nbsp Belarus 20 10 or 0 5 PDV Padatak na dadadzenuyu vartasc nbsp Belize 12 5 nbsp Benin 18 nbsp Bolivia 13 IVA Impuesto al Valor Agregado nbsp Bosnia and Herzegovina 17 PDV Porez na dodanu vrijednost nbsp Botswana 12 nbsp Brazil 20 IPI 19 ICMS average 3 ISS average 0 IPI 20 Imposto sobre produtos industrializados Tax over industrialized products Federal Tax ICMS 17 to 25 Imposto sobre circulacao e servicos tax over commercialization and services State Tax ISS 2 to 5 Imposto sobre servico de qualquer natureza tax over any service City tax nbsp Burkina Faso 18 nbsp Burundi 18 nbsp Cambodia 10 nbsp Cameroon 19 25 nbsp Canada 5 GST 0 9 975 PST or 13 15 HST depending on province 0 a on GST or HST for Prescription drugs medical devices basic groceries agricultural fishing products exported or foreign goods services and travel Other exemptions exist for PSTs and vary by province GST Goods and Services TaxHST b Harmonized Sales TaxPST Provincial Sales Tax nbsp Cape Verde 15 nbsp Central African Republic 19 nbsp Chad 18 nbsp Chile 19 IVA Impuesto al Valor Agregado nbsp China c 13 9 for foods printed matter and households fuels 6 for service or 3 for non value added tax 增值税 zeng zhi shui nbsp Colombia 19 IVA Impuesto al Valor Agregado nbsp Costa Rica 13 nbsp Democratic Republic of the Congo 16 nbsp Dominica 15 nbsp Dominican Republic 18 12 or 0 ITBIS Impuesto sobre Transferencia de Bienes Industrializados y Servicios nbsp Ecuador 12 0 IVA Impuesto al Valor Agregado nbsp Egypt 14 15 on communication services VAT Value Added Tax الضريبة على القيمة المضافة nbsp El Salvador 13 IVA Impuesto al Valor Agregado o Impuesto a la Transferencia de Bienes Muebles y a la Prestacion de Servicios nbsp Equatorial Guinea 15 nbsp Ethiopia 15 VAT Value Added Tax nbsp Faroe Islands 25 MVG Meirvirdisgjald nbsp Fiji 15 0 VAT Value Added Tax nbsp Gabon 18 nbsp Gambia 95 15 VAT Value Added Tax nbsp Georgia 18 0 DGhG Damatebuli Ghirebulebis gadasakhadi დღგ დამატებული ღირებულების გადასახადი nbsp Ghana 15 VAT Value Added Tax plus National Health Insurance Levy NHIL 2 5 nbsp Grenada 15 nbsp Guatemala 12 IVA Impuesto al Valor Agregado nbsp Guinea 18 nbsp Guinea Bissau 15 nbsp Guyana 16 0 VAT Value Added Tax nbsp Haiti 10 nbsp Honduras 15 4 additional on tourism tax 96 ISV Impuesto Sobre Ventas nbsp Iceland 24 11 d VSK VASK Virdisaukaskattur nbsp India e 5 5 5 5 VAT Value Added Tax nbsp Indonesia 11 11 0 for primary groceries medical services financial services education and also insurance PPN Pajak Pertambahan Nilai nbsp Iran 9 VAT Value Added Tax مالیات بر ارزش افزوده nbsp Isle of Man 20 nbsp Israel f 17 g 0 in Eilat 0 fruits and vegetables tourism services for foreign citizens intellectual property diamonds flights and apartments renting Ma am מס ערך מוסף מע מ nbsp Ivory Coast 18 nbsp Jamaica 12 5 nbsp Japan 10 8 groceries shōhizei 消費税 consumption tax nbsp Jersey h 5 0 GST Goods and Services Tax nbsp Jordan 16 GST Goods and Sales Tax nbsp Kazakhstan 12 ҚCҚ Қosylgan kunga salynatyn salyk Kazakh VAT Value Added Tax nbsp Kenya 16 nbsp Kyrgyzstan 20 nbsp Laos 10 nbsp Lebanon 11 TVA Taxe sur la valeur ajoutee nbsp Lesotho 14 nbsp Liechtenstein 98 7 7 3 8 lodging services or 2 5 MWST Mehrwertsteuer nbsp Madagascar 20 nbsp Malawi 16 5 nbsp Malaysia i 6 0 for fresh foods education healthcare land public transportation and medicines Sales and Services Tax SST was reintroduced by the Malaysian Government on 1 September 2018 to replace the Goods and Services Tax GST which had only been introduced just over three years before that on 1 April 2015 100 SST Sales and Services TaxCJP Cukai Jualan dan Perkhidmatan GST Goods and Services Tax Malaysia nbsp Maldives 6 0 GST Goods and services tax Government Tax nbsp Mali 18 nbsp Mauritania 14 nbsp Mauritius 15 VAT Value Added Tax nbsp Mexico 16 0 on books food and medicines IVA Impuesto al Valor Agregado nbsp Moldova 20 8 5 or 0 TVA Taxa pe Valoarea Adăugată nbsp Monaco 101 19 6 5 6 TVA Taxe sur la valeur ajoutee nbsp Mongolia 10 0 VAT Nemegdsen ortgijn alban tatvar nbsp Montenegro 21 7 PDV Porez na dodatu vrijednost nbsp Morocco 20 TVA Taxe sur Valeur Ajoutee الضريبة على القيمة المضافة nbsp Mozambique 17 nbsp Namibia 15 0 VAT Value Added Tax nbsp Nepal 13 0 VAT Value Added Taxes nbsp New Zealand 15 0 donated goods and services sold by non profits financial services rental payments for residential properties supply of fine metals and penalty interest 102 GST Goods and Services Tax nbsp Nicaragua 15 nbsp Niger 19 nbsp Nigeria 7 5 nbsp Niue 5 nbsp North Macedonia 18 5 or 0 DDV Danok na dodadena vrednost DDV Danok na dodadena vrednost nbsp Norway 25 15 food 12 public transport hotel cinema and 0 for electric cars until 2018 103 MVA Merverdiavgift bokmal or meirverdiavgift nynorsk informally moms nbsp Pakistan 17 1 or 0 GST General Sales Tax nbsp Palau 10 104 PGST Palau Goods amp Services Tax nbsp Palestine 16 VAT Value Added Tax nbsp Panama 7 0 ITBMS Impuesto de Transferencia de Bienes Muebles y Servicios nbsp Papua New Guinea 10 nbsp Paraguay 10 5 IVA Impuesto al Valor Agregado nbsp Peru 18 IGV 16 Impuesto General a la Ventas IPM 2 Impuesto de Promocion Municipal nbsp Philippines 12 j 6 on petroleum products and electricity and water services 0 for senior citizens all who are aged 60 and above on medicines professional fees for physicians medical and dental services transportation fares admission fees charged by theaters and amusement centers and funeral and burial services after the death of the senior citizen RVAT Reformed Value Added Tax locally known as Karagdagang Buwis Dungag nga Buhis nbsp Republic of Congo 16 nbsp Russia 20 10 essential food goods for children and medical products 106 or 0 NDS Nalog na dobavlennuyu stoimost NDS Nalog na dobavlennuyu stoimost nbsp Rwanda 18 0 VAT Value Added Tax nbsp Saint Kitts and Nevis 17 VAT Value Added Tax nbsp Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 15 nbsp Samoa 15 nbsp Saudi Arabia 15 ضريبة القيمة المضافة VAT nbsp Senegal 18 nbsp Serbia 20 107 10 108 or 0 PDV Porez na dodatu vrednost PDV Porez na dodatu vrednost nbsp Seychelles 15 nbsp Sierra Leone 15 nbsp Singapore 8 0 for public healthcare services such as at public hospitals and polyclinics with GST absorbed by the government GST Goods and Services Tax nbsp South Africa 15 0 on basic foodstuffs such as bread additionally on goods donated not for gain goods or services used for educational purposes such as school computers membership contributions to an employee organization such as labour union dues and rent paid on a house by a renter to a landlord 109 VAT Valued Added Tax BTW Belasting op toegevoegde waarde nbsp South Korea 10 0 essential foodstuffs VAT bugagachise Korean 부가가치세 Hanja 附加價値稅 nbsp Sri Lanka 12 0 VAT Valued Added Tax has been in effect in Sri Lanka since 2001 On the 2001 budget the rates have been revised to 12 and 0 from the previous 20 12 and 0 nbsp Sudan 17 nbsp Switzerland 7 7 110 3 7 hotel sector and 2 5 essential foodstuff books newspapers medical supplies 110 MWST Mehrwertsteuer TVA Taxe sur la valeur ajoutee IVA Imposta sul valore aggiunto TPV Taglia sin la Plivalur nbsp Taiwan 5 營業稅 ying ye shui business tax 加值型營業稅 jia zhi xing ying ye shui value added business tax nbsp Tajikistan 20 nbsp Tanzania 18 nbsp Thailand 10 7 VAT Value Added Tax phasimulkhaephim nbsp Togo 18 nbsp Tonga 15 nbsp Trinidad and Tobago 12 5 0 nbsp Tunisia 18 TVA Taxe sur la Valeur Ajoutee آداء على القيمة المضافة nbsp Turkey 20 10 or 1 KDV Katma deger vergisi nbsp Turkmenistan 15 nbsp Uganda 18 nbsp Ukraine 20 7 or 0 PDV Podatok na dodanu vartist PDV Podatok na dodanu vartist nbsp United Arab Emirates 5 ضريبة القيمة المضافة nbsp United Kingdom 20 111 0 in Guernsey and Gibraltar not part of EU VAT area 5 residential energy insulation renovations feminine hygiene products child safety seats and mobility aids and 0 for life necessities basic food water prescription medications medical equipment and medical supply public transport children s clothing books and periodicals Also 0 for new building construction but standard rate for building demolition modifications renovation etc 112 VAT TAW Value Added Tax Treth Ar Werth Welsh nbsp Uruguay 22 18 or 0 IVA Impuesto al Valor Agregado nbsp Uzbekistan 12 QQS Qoʻshilgan qiymat soligʻi nbsp Vanuatu 13 nbsp Vietnam 10 5 or 0 GTGT Gia Trị Gia Tăng nbsp Venezuela 12 11 IVA Impuesto al Valor Agregado nbsp Zambia 16 nbsp Zimbabwe 15 No reduced rate but rebates generally available for certain services HST is a combined federal provincial sales tax collected in some provinces GST is a 5 federal sales tax collected separately if there is a PST 5 of HSTs go to the federal government and the remainder to the province These taxes do not apply in Hong Kong and Macau which are financially independent as special administrative regions The reduced rate was 14 until 1 March 2007 when it was lowered to 7 and later changed to 11 The reduced rate applies to heating costs printed matter restaurant bills hotel stays and most food VAT is not implemented in 2 of India s 28 states Except Eilat where VAT is not raised 97 The VAT in Israel is in a state of flux It was reduced from 18 to 17 in March 2004 to 16 5 in September 2005 then to 15 5 in July 2006 It was then raised back to 16 5 in July 2009 and lowered to the rate of 16 in January 2010 It was then raised again to 17 on 1 September 2012 and once again on 2 June 2013 to 18 It was reduced from 18 to 17 in October 2015 The introduction of a goods and sales tax of 3 on 6 May 2008 was to replace revenue from Company Income Tax following a reduction in rates In the 2014 Budget the government announced that GST would be introduced in April 2015 Piped water power supply the first 200 units per month for domestic consumers transportation services education and health services are tax exempt However many details have not yet been confirmed 99 The President of the Philippines has the power to raise the tax to 12 after 1 January 2006 The tax was raised to 12 on 1 February 105 VAT free countries and territories As of January 2022 the countries and territories listed remained VAT free citation needed Country 113 Notes nbsp Akrotiri and Dhekelia British Overseas Territory nbsp Anguilla British Overseas Territory nbsp Bermuda British Overseas Territory nbsp British Antarctic Territory British Overseas Territory nbsp British Indian Ocean Territory British Overseas Territory nbsp British Virgin Islands British Overseas Territory nbsp Brunei nbsp Cayman Islands British Overseas Territory nbsp Cuba nbsp Falkland Islands British Overseas Territory nbsp Gibraltar British Overseas Territory nbsp Guernsey British Crown Dependency nbsp Hong Kong Special administrative region of China nbsp Iraq nbsp Kiribati VAT nbsp Libya nbsp Macau Special administrative region of China nbsp Maldives nbsp Marshall Islands nbsp Micronesia nbsp Montserrat British Overseas Territory nbsp Myanmar nbsp Nauru nbsp North Korea nbsp Pitcairn Islands British Overseas Territory nbsp Saint Helena Ascension and Tristan da Cunha British Overseas Territory nbsp San Marino nbsp Sao Tome and Principe nbsp Solomon Islands nbsp Somalia nbsp South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands British Overseas Territory nbsp South Sudan 18 VAT nbsp Svalbard nbsp Swaziland nbsp Syria Just recent tax of 14 85 hotels and 10 restaurants nbsp Timor Leste nbsp Turks and Caicos Islands British Overseas Territory nbsp Tuvalu nbsp United States Sales taxes are collected by most states and some cities counties and Native American reservations The federal government collects excise tax on some goods but does not collect a nationwide sales tax nbsp Vatican City nbsp Yemen Criticisms nbsp 4 May 2010 Campana no mas IVA in SpainThe value added tax has been criticized as the burden of it falls on personal end consumers of products Some critics consider it to be a regressive tax meaning that the poor pay more as a percentage of their income than the rich 114 Defenders argue that relating taxation levels to income is an arbitrary standard and that the value added tax is in fact a proportional tax an OECD study found that it could be slightly progressive but still have significant equity implications for the poor as people with higher income pay more as they consume more 115 116 The effective regressiveness of a VAT system can also be affected when different classes of goods are taxed at different rates 114 Some countries implementing a VAT have reduced income tax on lower income earners as well as instituted direct transfer payments to lower income groups resulting in lowering tax burdens on the poor 117 Revenues from a value added tax are frequently lower than expected because they are difficult and costly to administer and collect citation needed In many countries however where collection of personal income taxes and corporate profit taxes has been historically weak VAT collection has been more successful than other types of taxes VAT has become more important in many jurisdictions as tariff levels have fallen worldwide due to trade liberalization as VAT has essentially replaced lost tariff revenues Whether the costs and distortions of value added taxes are lower than the economic inefficiencies and enforcement issues e g smuggling from high import tariffs is debated but theory suggests value added taxes are far more efficient citation needed Certain industries small scale services for example tend to have more VAT avoidance particularly where cash transactions predominate and VAT may be criticized for encouraging this citation needed From the perspective of government however VAT may be preferable because it captures at least some of the value added For example a building contractor may offer to provide services for cash i e without a receipt and without VAT to a homeowner who usually cannot claim input VAT back The homeowner will thus bear lower costs and the building contractor may be able to avoid other taxes profit or payroll taxes citation needed Another avenue of criticism of implementing a VAT is that the increased tax passed to the consumer will increase the ultimate price paid by the consumer Deadweight loss The incidence of VAT may not fall entirely on consumers as traders tend to absorb VAT so as to maintain volumes of sales Conversely not all cuts in VAT are passed on in lower prices VAT consequently leads to a deadweight loss if cutting prices pushes a business below the margin of profitability The effect can be seen when VAT is cut or abolished When VAT on restaurant meals in Sweden was reduced from 25 to 12 5 11 000 additional jobs were created 118 Risk of fraud criticism VAT offers distinctive opportunities for evasion and fraud especially through abuse of the credit and refund mechanism 119 VAT overclaim is a risk for the state due to fraudulent claims for input repayment by registered traders and carousel fraud There is leads to a VAT gap which can be up to 34 in the case of Romania 120 Churning Because VAT is included in the price index to which state benefits such as pensions and welfare payments are linked as well as public sector pay some of the apparent revenue is churned i e taxpayers have to be given the money to pay the tax with resulting in zero net revenue 121 Cashflow impacts Multiple VAT charges over the supply chain give rise to cashflow problems due to refund delays from the tax administration 14 Compliance costs Compliance costs for VAT are a heavy burden on business 122 In the UK compliance costs for VAT have been estimated by Professor Cedric Sandford to be about 4 of the yield though the figure is higher for smaller businesses 123 Trade criticism nbsp National VAT act as a tariff on imports and their exports are exempt from VAT zero rated 124 Because exports are generally zero rated and VAT refunded or offset against other taxes this is often where VAT fraud occurs In Europe the main source of problems is called carousel fraud citation needed This kind of fraud originated in the 1970s in the Benelux countries Today VAT fraud is a major problem in the UK 125 There are also similar fraud possibilities inside a country To avoid this in some countries like Sweden the major owner of a limited company is personally responsible for taxes 124 Under a sales tax system only businesses selling to the end user are required to collect tax and bear the accounting cost of collecting the tax Under VAT manufacturers and wholesale companies also incur accounting expenses to handle the additional paperwork required for collecting VAT increasing overhead costs and prices Many politicians and economists in the United States consider value added taxation on US goods and VAT rebates for goods from other countries to be unfair practice For example the American Manufacturing Trade Action Coalition claims that any rebates or special taxes on imported goods should not be allowed by the rules of the World Trade Organisation AMTAC claims that so called border tax disadvantage is the greatest contributing factor to the 5 8 trillion US current account deficit for the decade of the 2000s and estimated this disadvantage to US producers and service providers to be 518 billion in 2008 alone Some US politicians such as congressman Bill Pascrell are advocating either changing WTO rules relating to VAT or rebating VAT charged on US exporters by passing the Border Tax Equity Act 126 A business tax rebate for exports is also proposed in the 2016 GOP policy paper for tax reform 127 66 The assertion that this border adjustment would be compatible with the rules of the WTO is controversial it was alleged that the proposed tax would favour domestically produced goods as they would be taxed less than imports to a degree varying across sectors For example the wage component of the cost of domestically produced goods would not be taxed 128 A 2021 study in the American Economic Journal found that value added taxes are unlikely to distort trade flows 129 See alsoExcise Flat tax Georgism Gross receipts tax Henry George Income tax Indirect tax Land value tax Missing Trader Fraud Carousel VAT Fraud Progressive tax Single tax Turnover tax X taxGeneral List of tax rates around the worldReferences a b Consumption Tax Trends 2018 VAT GST and excise rates trends and policy issues Secretary General of the OECD 2018 doi 10 1787 ctt 2018 en ISBN 978 92 64 22394 3 S2CID 239487087 Retrieved 24 September 2016 Asquith Richard Countries with VAT VATCalc Tax Agile Retrieved 15 August 2023 a b Bickley James M 3 January 2008 Value Added Tax A New U S Revenue Source PDF Report Congressional Research Service pp 1 3 RL33619 Archived PDF from the original on 28 June 2016 Retrieved 24 September 2016 a b Cole Alan 29 October 2015 Ted Cruz s Business Flat Tax A Primer Tax Policy Blog Tax Foundation Retrieved 24 September 2016 a b Beram Philip An Introduction to the Value Added Tax VAT PDF Report United States Chamber of Commerce Archived PDF from the original on 24 September 2016 Retrieved 24 September 2016 a b c Helgason Agnar Freyr 2017 Unleashing the money machine the domestic political foundations of VAT adoption Socio Economic Review 15 4 797 813 doi 10 1093 ser mwx004 Les recettes fiscales Le budget et les comptes de l Etat in French Minister of the Economy Industry and Employment France 30 October 2009 Archived from the original on 2 January 2010 Retrieved 15 May 2009 la TVA represente 125 4 milliards d euros soit 49 7 des recettes fiscales nettes de l Etat Bodin Jean Paul Ebril Liam P Keen Michael Summers Victoria P 5 November 2001 The Modern VAT International Monetary Fund ISBN 978 1 58906 026 5 Retrieved 30 April 2012 Snyder Stan Understanding cash and accrual basis accounting Office com Archived from the original on 25 September 2013 Retrieved 14 June 2013 Value Added Tax rates by country USCIB 15 December 2016 Retrieved 13 November 2020 Minh Le Tuan 1 May 2003 Value Added Taxation Mechanism Design and Policy Issues World Bank S2CID 9409506 the mechanism provides strong incentives for firms to keep invoices Value Added Taxes An Option for States PDF Policy Brief 5 Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy 2005 Archived PDF from the original on 8 July 2023 kristenbickerstaff 21 December 2020 What is the difference between sales tax and VAT Tax amp Accounting Blog Posts by Thomson Reuters Retrieved 20 July 2023 a b The impact of VAT compliance on business PDF PriceWaterhouseCoopers September 2010 a b Armenia Corporate Other taxes taxsummaries pwc com The tax system in Armenia Economy Armenia travel history Archeology amp Ecology Tourarmenia Travel guide to Armenia THE TAX SYSTEM IN ARMENIA Economy Armenia Travel History Archeology amp Ecology TourArmenia Travel Guide to Armenia n d Retrieved December 3 2022 Armenia to change VAT rules covering digital services supplied by non residents Vertex Inc 2022 March 14 Retrieved December 3 2022 NBR seeks extension of time cost for VAT online project New Age 8 August 2017 p 1 5 pdf PDF National Board of Revenue a b ব ল দ শ জ ত য স সদ PDF nbr gov bd Retrieved 5 October 2023 8 pdf PDF National Board of Revenue 13 pdf PDF National Board of Revenue Microsoft Word 3472 Act 20 National Parliament 21 November 2015 9075 9077 PDF nbr gov bd Retrieved 5 October 2023 VATR2016 PDF nbr gov bd Retrieved 5 October 2023 Import Tariffs International Trade Administration 25 September 2021 Retrieved 3 March 2022 Caribbean National Budgets 2011 Barbados Budget Address www caribbeanelections com Retrieved 3 March 2022 Barbados Taxes barbados org Retrieved 3 March 2022 Value Added Tax V A T www bra gov bb Retrieved 3 March 2022 Ley No 825 Sobre Impuesto a las Ventas y Servicios www sii cl Retrieved 26 March 2023 Como es el Sistema Tributario de Chile Programa de Educacion Fiscal SII Educa www sii cl in Spanish Retrieved 26 March 2023 China s VAT System Beijing Review Bjreview com cn 3 August 2009 Retrieved 14 June 2013 Directive 2006 112 EC VAT rates applied in the Member States of the European Union PDF European Commission 1 January 2021 Retrieved 3 July 2021 Thacker Sunil 2008 2009 Taxation in the Gulf Introduction of a Value Added Tax Michigan State Journal of International Law 17 3 721 SSRN 1435988 Diaa Sarah 15 June 2016 UAE outlines VAT threshold for firms in Phase 1 Gulf News PricewaterhouseCoopers UAE to implement VAT on 1 January 2018 PDF Saudi Arabia triples VAT to support coronavirus hit economy BBC News 11 May 2020 Japan National Tax Agency Information about consumption tax Government of Japan Retrieved 1 July 2019 Japan External Trade Organization Overview of consumption tax Government of Japan Retrieved 1 July 2019 Kyodo Staff Report 15 October 2018 Abe says he s going ahead with Japan s consumption tax hike in October 2019 The Japan Times Retrieved 1 July 2019 Service Tax Bill 2018 passed by Dewan Rakyat Archived from the original on August 8 2018 Retrieved August 8 2018 Pakatan keeps its word bill to repeal GST passed Archived from the original on August 8 2018 Retrieved August 8 2018 Guan Eng Operating deficit if SST not imposed on Sept 1 Free Malaysia Today 30 August 2018 Retrieved 30 August 2018 Vuoristo Pekka 26 August 2009 Hallitus sopuun ruan veroalesta Helsingin Sanomat Archived from the original on 28 August 2009 Retrieved 26 August 2009 The Value Added Tax Act with subsequent amendments PDF Ministry of Finance and Economic Affairs 9 October 2014 Main features of the Government s tax programme for 2011 Ministry of Finance 5 October 2010 Archived from the original on 26 December 2018 Retrieved 4 December 2010 Merverdiavgiftsloven 6 21 to 6 33 in Norwegian lovdata no Retrieved 28 November 2010 Merverdiavgiftsloven 6 1 to 6 20 in Norwegian lovdata no Retrieved 28 November 2010 Russian Federation Other taxes impacting corporate entities Value added tax VAT Nalogovyj kodeks Rossijskoj Federacii Chast vtoraya ot 5 avgusta 2000 g N 117 FZ Russian Federation Tax Code Part 2 August 5 2000 N 117 Federal Law Rossijskaya Gazeta 3 Nalogooblozhenie proizvoditsya po nalogovoj stavke 18 procentov v sluchayah ne ukazannyh v punktah 1 2 i 4 nastoyashej stati TAX CODE OF THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION PART II Article 164 Tax Rates PDF Russian Ministry of Finance p 41 Jenkins Glenn P Khadka Rup March April 1998 Value Added Tax Policy and Implementation in Singapore PDF VAT Monitor Amsterdam International Bureau of Fiscal Documentation 9 2 35 47 ISSN 0925 0832 Han Goh Yan 18 February 2022 Budget 2022 Singapore to raise GST from 7 to 9 in two stages in 2023 and 2024 The Straits Times www straitstimes com Retrieved 11 January 2023 Tipos de IVA en Espana ano 2022 Rankia in European Spanish 9 January 2020 Retrieved 31 March 2022 Budget Speech 2018 Fin24 Retrieved 21 February 2018 Liechtenstein cuts VAT to 7 7 2018 Avalara avalara com Thor Anatoliy Company formation in Ukraine Trinova Corp v Michigan Dept of Treasury 498 U S 358 362 United States Supreme Court 1991 Although in Europe and Latin America VAT s are common in the United States they are much studied but little used Gulino Denny 18 September 2015 Puerto Rico May Finally Get Attention of Republican Lawmakers MNI Retrieved 9 February 2016 The concept of a value added tax in any form as part of the U S tax regime has consistently raised the hackles of Republican policy makers and even some Democrats because of fears it could add to the tax burden rather than just redistribute it to consumption from earnings For decades one of the most hotly debated tax policy topics a VAT imposes a sales tax at every stage where value is added Puerto Rico adopts VAT system and broadens sales and use tax PDF PricewaterhouseCoopers 26 June 2015 Retrieved 9 February 2016 a b Harpaz Joe 17 September 2015 Puerto Rico Brings First Ever Value Added Tax to the U S Forbes Retrieved 9 February 2016 Examining Puerto Rico Tax Regime Changes Addition of Value Added Tax and Amendments to Sales and Use Income Taxes Bloomberg BNA 11 January 2016 Retrieved 9 February 2016 Puerto Rico s adoption of a VAT represents a major shift in tax policy and renders the Commonwealth as the first U S jurisdiction to adopt this tax regime Outline of the Michigan Tax System Citizens Research Council of Michigan January 2011 Archived 5 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine Lingle Linda and Kawafuchi Kurt June 2002 An introduction to the general excise tax State of Hawaii Department of taxation Ryan Ellis 5 January 2017 Tax Reform Border Adjustability and Territoriality When tax and fiscal policy meets political reality Forbes retrieved 18 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Pravilnika o izvajanju Zakona o davku na dodano vrednost Ministry of Finance 24 June 2013 Retrieved 1 July 2013 Spain raises VAT from 18 to 21 1 September 2012 VAT Live 13 July 2012 Retrieved 8 August 2012 Dr Freda Lewis Hall Joins Pfizer As Chief Medical Officer London Stock Exchange Archived from the original on 18 October 2009 Swedish VAT compliance and rates VAT Live Retrieved 25 January 2014 Momsen hur fungerar den Skatteverket Skatteverket se 1 January 2014 Retrieved 25 January 2014 Albania Other taxes impacting corporate entities PwC 6 September 2019 Archived from the original on 16 December 2019 Retrieved 16 December 2019 Andorra crea un IVA con un tipo general del 4 5 y uno reducido del 1 La Vanguardia 4 July 2010 Archived from the original on 3 August 2012 Retrieved 13 October 2010 Angola Indirect Tax Changes for 2021 www ey com Retrieved 2 December 2021 The Government of The Bahamas VAT Bahamas VAT Bahamas 5 June 2015 Retrieved 5 June 2015 Bahamas Planning to Introduce 7 5 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The Independent Border Adjusted Taxation Value Added Tax VAT Amtacdc org Retrieved 30 April 2012 Thiessen Marc A 17 January 2017 Yes Trump can make Mexico pay for the border wall Here s how The Washington Post Retrieved 17 January 2017 Freund Caroline 18 January 2017 Trump Is Right Border Adjustment Tax Is Complicated BloombergView Bloomberg LP Retrieved 19 January 2017 Benzarti Youssef Tazhitdinova Alisa 2021 Do Value Added Taxes Affect International Trade Flows Evidence from 30 Years of Tax Reforms PDF American Economic Journal Economic Policy 13 4 469 489 doi 10 1257 pol 20190492 ISSN 1945 7731 S2CID 240240194 Scholarly sources Log nr 50 1988 um virdisaukaskatt in Icelandic 1988 Archived from the original on 9 October 2007 Retrieved 5 September 2007 Ahmed Ehtisham and Nicholas Stern 1991 The Theory and Practice of Tax Reform in Developing Countries Cambridge University Press Bird Richard M and P P Gendron 1998 Dual VATs and Cross border Trade Two Problems One Solution International Tax and Public Finance 5 429 42 Bird Richard M and P P Gendron 2000 CVAT VIVAT and Dual VAT Vertical Sharing and Interstate Trade International Tax and Public Finance 7 753 61 Keen Michael and S Smith 2000 Viva VIVAT International Tax and Public Finance 7 741 51 Keen Michael and S Smith 1996 The Future of Value added Tax in the European Union Economic Policy 23 375 411 McLure Charles E 1993 The Brazilian Tax Assignment Problem Ends Means and Constraints in A Reforma Fiscal no Brasil Sao Paulo Fundacao Instituto de Pesquisas Economicas McLure Charles E 2000 Implementing Subnational VATs on Internal Trade The Compensating VAT CVAT International Tax and Public Finance 7 723 40 Muller Nichole 2007 Indisches Recht mit Schwerpunkt auf gewerblichem Rechtsschutz im Rahmen eines Projektgeschafts in Indien IBL Review VOL 12 Institute of International Business and law Germany Law and business de Muller Nichole 2007 Indian law with emphasis on commercial legal insurance within the scope of a project business in India IBL Review VOL 12 Institute of International Business and law Germany MOMS Politikens Nudansk Leksikon 2002 ISBN 978 87 604 1578 4 OECD 2008 Consumption Tax Trends 2008 VAT GST and Excise Rates Trends and Administration Issues Paris OECD Serra J and J Afonso 1999 Fiscal Federalism Brazilian Style Some Reflections Paper presented to Forum of Federations Mont Tremblant Canada October 1999 Shome Parthasarathi and Paul Bernd Spahn 1996 Brazil Fiscal Federalism and Value Added Tax Reform Working Paper No 11 National Institute of Public Finance and Policy New Delhi Silvani Carlos and Paulo dos Santos 1996 Administrative Aspects of Brazil s Consumption Tax Reform International VAT Monitor 7 123 32 Tait Alan A 1988 Value Added Tax International Practice and Problems Washington International Monetary Fund Saudi Arabia Increases Value Added Tax VAT will be increase to 15 from 5 as of July 2020 External links nbsp The dictionary definition of value added tax at Wiktionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Value added tax amp oldid 1194446706, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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