Abstract

Value Added Tax (VAT) is the largest source of global tax revenue. However, it faces issues of tax avoidance, such as the black-market and missing trader intra-community fraud. Many studies have postulated that the introduction of the Reverse Charge System (RCS) will contribute to the enhancement of transparency and fairness in trade for small and medium enterprises (SMEs) that supply goods or provide services. This study analyzes SME taxpayers’ perception of transparency and fairness in trade resulting from the introduction of the RCS into the South Korean VAT system. In B2B transactions that handle gold, copper, and steel scrap, large companies often abuse their bargaining power over smaller firms by not paying VAT with their purchase or reducing the prices to equal VAT, leading to low trade transparency. When it comes to gold, copper and steel scrap trading, the imbalance in bargaining power results in one of the parties being unable to reap maximum benefits because of unfairness. SMEs with relatively weak bargaining power suffer from unfair trading practices such as price cutting and the imposition of VAT by their counterparts. Since the introduction of the RCS, however, SME taxpayers appear to believe that trade fairness has improved. This study’s findings reveal that SMEs are more likely to perceive improvement in trade transparency and fairness since the implementation of the RCS, indicating that the RCS has exerted a positive influence on SMEs. This study provides important policy implications for countries that intend to implement the RCS by offering empirical evidence of its benefits.

Highlights

  • Value Added Tax (VAT) was first introduced in the 1970s to generate revenues needed for economic development across the world

  • Limitations imposed on the VAT system by the invoicing method as such has led to the prevalence of missing trader intra-community (MTIC) fraud where firms file for bankruptcy after reclaiming the input tax without paying the output tax, and black-market fraud in which VAT is evaded by means of actual transactions without records such as credit card or cash receipts [1,3,5,6]

  • With a focus on VAT, which makes up the bulk of tax revenue worldwide, this study analyzes the innovative effects of converting the VAT system into an Reverse Charge System (RCS)

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Summary

Introduction

Value Added Tax (VAT) was first introduced in the 1970s (in the case of Europe, the 1960s) to generate revenues needed for economic development across the world. In Korea, the final VAT has the form of subtracting the input VAT from the output VAT. In the case of the gross approach, additional VAT and refundable VAT exist at the same time, but when the net approach is applied, only one additional or refundable VAT exists. In both of the above forms, deductible and return are all possible in the normal state of the supply chain. The cases presented in this study are notions that apply in most countries

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