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MALAYSIA is weighing the return of a broad-based consumption tax instead of implementing subsidy cuts for a commonly used petrol as the government seeks to bolster its finances, according to people familiar with the matter.

Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim’s Cabinet has been discussing the viability of bringing back the goods and services tax (GST), the people said, asking not to be identified as the information is private. No decision has been reached given the political sensitivities, they added.

There is an emerging view in government that imposing GST may be politically easier than removing subsidies for the popular RON95 petrol since the South-east Asian country is an oil producer and most Malaysians consider cheap petrol to be a necessity, the people said.

Still, bringing in a consumption tax is a political minefield for governments in Malaysia that have struggled for decades to boost tax collection rates, which are among the lowest in South-east Asia. Passing legislation to reinstate GST is easier with a two-thirds majority in parliament, which Anwar controls through his coalition, but government lawmakers are more than likely to be against it.

Anwar has reason to be cautious in bringing back the GST, which was first introduced by former leader Najib Razak back in 2015 at 6 per cent and partly led to his downfall in elections three years later. The subsequent government, led by Mahathir Mohamad, repealed the unpopular consumption tax, and his finance minister said it was used to partly cover up the multibillion-US-dollar 1MDB scandal.

While Anwar had said as recently as May that there were no plans to introduce new taxes, the people said that there has been a shift within government given stronger-than-expected economic growth, a cut in diesel subsidies in June adding to coffers and the prime minister’s coalition clinching a landslide win in a recent by-election.

A spokesperson with Malaysia’s Finance Ministry declined to comment while the Economy Ministry did not respond to a Bloomberg News request for comment.

Malaysia’s government wants to cut its budget deficit to 4.3 per cent of gross domestic product in 2024 from 5 per cent last year by phasing out broad subsidies. Any signs of a shift in government thinking may come when Anwar, who is also finance minister, presents the federal budget on Oct 18.

However, Anwar’s administration is already lifting spending by increasing civil-service salaries by over RM10 billion (S$3.3 billion) by next year, the first revision in more than a decade.

The OECD on Tuesday (Aug 27) urged Malaysia to reintroduce GST at a low rate while compensating low-income households with “targeted transfers”, saying in a report that Malaysia’s tax revenue accounts for only 12 per cent of GDP. The nation needs to find additional tax revenues to meet its deficit target and finance future spending needs, the Paris-based organisation said.

Industry groups want to see the same. The National Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Malaysia said in May that setting the GST at 4 per cent would be the best way to boost government revenue and tax-refund vouchers should be considered.

Malaysia currently uses a sales and service tax, which replaced the GST in 2018 and is not seen as broad-based. The sales tax component stands at 5 to 10 per cent for locally manufactured goods and imports, while the standard rate for the service tariff is 6 per cent.

Source: https://www.businesstimes.com.sg/international/asean/malaysia-weighs-bringing-back-gst-boost-finances?amp