There’s been a lot of news lately about the announcement of the
Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) to go after online sellers. This is
because a lot of the ones doing purely online retail may not be applying
the standard duties on sales like VAT.
Commissioner Henares has been stressing
that they are looking for ways to be able to monitor and collect taxes
from online retailers. For one, the usual government bureaucracy of
putting up a brick-and-mortar business can be easily bypassed when you do it purely online (you can skip the building permit, mayor’s permit, etc.).
Let’s be clear first that whether it’s offline or online, generating
revenue/income from selling products or services is taxable. There’s
nothing new that will be introduced. It’s more like enforcing what’s
already there.
The closest analogy that I can think of is jaywalking. Anybody
who jaywalks can be penalized; it’s already impoed a long time ago.
However, there are streets that are not monitored by MMDA so when people
crosses that street, they don’t get penalized. Now, the MMDA is saying
they will start monitoring those streets that people used to jaywalk all
the time because nobody was looking.
Anyway, to give you a better perspective of the difference between
brick-and-mortar retailing (those stores in the mall) and online
selling, let’s look at an example.
Take for example the Galaxy S3. My sources tell me that the
distributor cost of the unit is around Php16,000 only. If the suggested
retail price is Php32,000, you subtract the 12% VAT and you are left
with Php28,571 (while the Php3,429 is remitted to BIR at the end of the
month).
Here’s what we think is the estimate computation:
Suggested Retail Price: Php32,990
Less:
VAT — Php3,535
Unit Cost — Php16,000
Gross Revenue: Php13,455
Less:
Operating Expenses (@ 30%): Php4,037
Income (before Taxes): Php9,418
Business Tax (30% of Income): Php2,825
Net Income: Php6,593
The amount of Php6,593 is the estimated income per unit sold if this was a regular retail store in the mall.
When we look at the same for an online store, it should look the
same. The biggest difference would be the operating expenses (OPEX)
which might be lower than our estimated 30%.
However, if all else is the same but we remove the tax incidence, we
are looking at Php6,360 in savings. If all of these savings are passed
on to the customer, then we are looking at an online price of Php26,630.
This is where the mall price and the online price differ. This is the
single biggest reason why mall retailers cannot compete with the prices
of online retailers.
What if the BIR was so strict and it runs after the online sellers
and ask them to pay taxes? The most logical step is for the sellers to
tuck those taxes into the price of the unit.
That would mean that our computation above would revert back to the
highest mall price. If the online sellers want to be more competitive,
they might lower their retail price a bit. They would normally get this
from the savings they get from doing the selling purely online (that’s
less rent, bills, etc). So instead of our 30% estimated opex, it could
be just 15% (Php2,018).
They could then pass on that savings to the customer for a little lower retail price.
Then again, the online sellers would look at this situation
differently. They would stick to their usual pricing, keep the little
margins that they get from selling way below SRP, and pray hope that the
BIR would not go after them for not declaring any sales.
Otherwise, if they abide by the norm and pay the respective dues (and
at the same time stick to their competitive pricing), I don’t think
there would be any income left after paying VAT and business tax. In
some cases, I would even think they’d lose money altogether. This is
where a lot of the resentment by online sellers come from.
Worse comes worst, the online sellers to cave in and start selling
their products at almost the same price as the ones in the malls.
Monday, December 31, 2012
Are you ready for Online Shopping to be taxed?
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