A GOODS and services tax (GST) of 3 per cent was introduced in 1994 to enable Singapore to shift its reliance from direct taxes to indirect taxes, and to sustain a lower income tax rate.
It was later raised to 4 per cent in 2003, 5 per cent in 2004, and 7 per cent in 2007.
Middle-income individuals are largely unaffected as income tax rates have been revised down five times in the past 10 years. This more or less offsets the increasing GST rate.
Unfortunately for middle-income individuals who have retired, the Government seems to have ignored how inequitable GST is to them.
Growth dividends, which are a one-off occurrence, also do not address the continuing injustice against these retirees. Individuals living in bigger Housing Board flats receive $600 regardless of whether their assessable income is zero or $100,000. If the annual value of their homes exceeds $13,000, they receive $300, even though the annual value does not translate into income.
The Government should correct this.
David Boey
If don't raise GST, how to help the poor?
Ok, this joke is getting old.
I need new ones.