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10 APRIL 2024

Wednesday, April 1, 2015

GST in M'sia: What's taxable and what's not?

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PM Najib, saya lihat harga barang di sini berpatutan dan barangan keperluan asas berkadar sifar seperti yg ditetapkan Kerajaan.

From April 1, Malaysia will introduce a Goods and Services Tax (GST) of six per cent.
GST replaces the Sales and Services Tax (SST) of up to 10 per cent. With GST, prices of goods and services could remain the same, go up or even decrease - in the case of goods and services that are currently subjected to the higher SST.
ere's a quick guide on what's GST-exempted and what's not:
GST-exempted goods and services
Livestock, fresh and frozen meat/fish:
Livestock including cattle, buffalo, pig, sheep and goat; live chickens and ducks;
Fresh and frozen meat
All kinds of live, fresh, chilled and frozen fish (except for fish for ornamental use)
Other kinds of water creatures:
These include crustaceans (lobsters, crabs, prawns, shrimps), molluscs (oysters, mussels, cuttlefish, snails) and others such as sea cucumbers and jellyfish
Eggs (chicken and duck eggs, fresh or salted)
Fresh vegetables and fruits
Spices and herbs
Rice, flour, noodles, bread
Cooking oil and condiments including sugar, salt, cooking oil, shrimp sauce, fish sauce and soy sauce.
Coffee, tea and cocoa powder
Baby formula (aged 0 to 36 months)
Items in the National Essential Medicines List
This covers 4,215 medicine brands for the treatment of major chronic diseases such as cancer, cardiovascular disorder, diabetes, hypertension, infertility.
All types of reading materials and newspapers
Public transportation
Treated water for domestic use
Electrical supply for the first 300 units (kwh) of domestic use
RON95 petrol and diesel
Postal services
Medical treatment at hospitals and clinics
GST-taxable goods and services that will cost more as they were previously untaxed
Processed food items (e.g pre-marinated meat, fish and vegetables, canned food, fishballs, meat balls, bottled contiments, chocolates, biscuits)
Kitchenware
Clothing and foot wear
Beauty and health products
Toys and games
Electronic gadgets including cameras, computers, laptops and mobile phones
Pre-paid phone cards
Concert and movie tickets
Banking fees (e.g. loan processing, fund transfers, standing instruction services, cheque books)
Consultation with GST-registered independent doctors
This refers to the goods and services that were previously subjected to the higher 10 per cent SST. These range from electrical appliances (e.g. television sets, refrigerators, air-conditioners, home theatre system, irons, hair dryers, electric fans), cars, consumer items (eg. soft drinks, imported fruits) to items like diapers, Dettol, toothpaste and furniture. -Asiaone

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