Indonesia showers property buyers with waivers to spur economy


JAKARTA: Indonesia slashed income tax on the sale of luxury properties in the latest bid to spark a revival in its stagnant property sector and support growth in Southeast Asia’s largest economy.

The tax on income from sales of luxury houses and condominiums priced at 30 billion rupiah ($2.1 million) or more was reduced to 1% from 5%, according to a statement issued by the Cabinet Secretariat Tuesday. 

The threshold for the application of the lower tax, effective from June 19, was raised from 10 billion rupiah previously, it said.

Key Insights

President Joko Widodo is seeking to stimulate the property sector in the hope of the industry’s multipliers effect on sub-sectors such as cement, ceramics, electronics and furniture helping overall economic growth.

The government is extending tax breaks to the luxury property segment as it has seen sluggish sales in the past five years. Growth in the overall property sector eased to 3.58% last year from 3.68% in 2017, according to data from statistics bureau.

As the mass-housing market makes up a large part of the industry, the government has also waived value-added tax up to a certain value for those properties.
    
The series of tax incentives for housing shows the government is complementing earlier moves by Bank Indonesia to relax the loan-to-value ratio for home-buyers, according to PT Bank Central Asia Chief Economist David Sumual. The measures may help property sector expand in the short term, he said.

The government earlier this month made it cheaper to purchase expensive houses by raising the luxury tax threshold limit. The luxury levy of 20% now applies only to properties valued at 30 billion rupiah.

Authorities have also fast-tracked the process of validating income tax in property sales to 3 days from 15 days earlier.

The income tax on sales of luxury cars, motorcycles, private aircraft and yachts will remain at 5%, according to a Finance Ministry notification. The rate will apply on cars priced at more than 2 billion rupiah and motorcycles valued at more than 300 million rupiah. - Bloomberg

 

Limited time offer:
Just RM5 per month.

Monthly Plan

RM13.90/month
RM5/month

Billed as RM5/month for the 1st 6 months then RM13.90 thereafters.

Annual Plan

RM12.33/month

Billed as RM148.00/year

1 month

Free Trial

For new subscribers only


Cancel anytime. No ads. Auto-renewal. Unlimited access to the web and app. Personalised features. Members rewards.
Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!
   

Next In Business News

PepsiCo's first-quarter results beat as international demand drives growth
Spotify profits up, but lower marketing hits user growth
Rafizi: Economy continues to strengthen along with Bursa Malaysia
MAHB's 1Q24 traffic hits more than 90% recovery rate against 1Q19
IRDA's RM636bil investment goal to help propel Malaysia into top 30 global economies
DXN Holdings net profit for FY24 rises to RM310.99mil
Ringgit closes slightly lower against US dollar
Inta Bina bags RM170mil construction job
PETRONAS Gas commits to sustainability, announces total dividend of 72 sen per share
Crest Builder bags RM486mil condo job

Others Also Read