The Goods and Services Tax (GST) is a broad-based consumption tax legislated in Bhutan under the Goods and Services Tax Act of Bhutan 2020. Intended to replace the existing sales tax and excise duty with a single uniform rate, it represents the country's largest tax reform, but its implementation has been postponed repeatedly because of technical problems with the supporting IT system and the disruption of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Goods and Services Tax (GST) is a value-added consumption tax adopted by Bhutan to modernise its indirect-tax system. It was created by the Goods and Services Tax Act of Bhutan 2020, enacted in February 2020, which is designed to replace the country's sales tax and excise duty with a single, broad-based tax collected at each stage of supply.[1]
The reform is the most significant overhaul of Bhutanese taxation in decades, intended to widen the tax base, reduce cascading taxes and simplify compliance. Its passage and rollout have, however, been protracted: the GST Bill was passed amid legal and procedural controversy, and actual implementation has been deferred several times.[2]
Design
The Act establishes a uniform GST applied to most goods and services, replacing the differentiated sales-tax and excise regime. The headline rate was originally set at 7 per cent, and later policy discussion moved toward a standard rate of 5 per cent. Subsequent amendments adjusted the scope of the tax — for example bringing items such as smartphones and telecommunications services within its coverage.[3]
Delayed implementation
Although enacted in 2020, the GST could not be brought into force on schedule. The National Assembly first deferred implementation from 1 July 2021 to 1 July 2022, and it was subsequently pushed back again to 1 July 2024.[4] The repeated postponements were attributed chiefly to the unreadiness of the Bhutan Integrated Taxation System (BITS), the IT platform on which the tax depends, together with the disruption of the COVID-19 pandemic. The much-postponed launch was ultimately targeted for January 2026.[3]
The long delay illustrates the practical challenge of building the administrative and digital infrastructure required for a modern value-added tax in a small economy, and the GST's eventual introduction is expected to reshape both government revenue and consumer prices in Bhutan.
References
- Goods and Services Tax Act of Bhutan 2020 — Ministry of Finance, Royal Government of Bhutan
- Bhutan passes GST Bill despite legal issues — South Asia Monitor
- New amendments in the GST Act put smartphones and telecom bills under 7% tax — The Bhutanese
- Bhutan GST launch delayed to July 2024 — vatcalc.com
See also
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