BY ISABELLE LAI
isabellelai@thestar.com.my
PETALING JAYA: Home prices will rise by about 2.6% once the goods and
services tax (GST) comes into play, said the Real Estate and Housing Developers’
Association Malaysia (Rehda).
The chairman of the association’s task force on accounting and taxation,
Datuk Ng Seing Liong, said that the calculation was based on its consultations
with industry experts and member developers.
Rehda’s 2.6% estimate differs from that of the Customs Department, which
expects the GST to have an impact of between 0.5% and 2% on house prices,
assuming there’s no change in supply and demand conditions.
Ng said the association was in full support of the GST and concurred with
Customs GST director Datuk Subromaniam Tholasy, who had said that land did not
incur the 6% GST rate.
However, he said land was by no means the largest cost component in property
development.
“As our calculation clearly spells out, the construction cost, which
constitutes 46% of the total development, is not only the largest component but
also the component which will attract the GST of 6%,” he said in a letter to
StarBiz.
He said the GST on this component would inevitably lead to an increase in
house prices.
Appending calculations for a housing unit originally priced at RM400,000, Ng
said the price post-GST would be around RM410,560.
Under the 46% construction component, costs were broken down into non-service
taxable and service taxable segments, representing 44%, or RM176,000, and 2%, or
RM8,000, respectively.
Under the non-service taxable segment comes items such as cement/concrete,
steel, bricks and sand, while the service taxable segment includes tiles and
fittings/sanitary. Under the existing sales and service tax, no tax is imposed
on the non-service taxable category, while the service taxable category has a
tax of up to 10% imposed on it.
Post-GST, Rehda’s calculations showed that the non-service taxable cost had
gone up to RM186,560, while the service taxable cost remained at RM8,000.
It maintained the same cost estimates for other items, including land (15% or
RM60,000), infrastructure and pre-development works (10% or RM40,000),
professional fees and marketing costs (6% or RM24,000), finance costs (6% or
RM24,000) and profit (17% or RM68,000).
Ng said Rehda also disagreed with Subromaniam, who had said that developers
could easily absorb cost increases as their margins were around 30%.
He said it was currently impossible for developers to earn up to a 30%
profit, as most development costs were on the rise, along with various capital
contributions and charges imposed on developers.
“On average, as tabulated in the calculation, developers, most of which are
public-listed companies, are only making around 17% at best,” he said.
However, Ng said it was still too early to determine the actual house price
increases post-GST, as Rehda was still in discussions with the Government and
there appeared to be many more issues to be ironed out.
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