Finance Minister Choi Sang-mok has said the government needs to scrap a financial investment income tax and review various tax schemes regarding stock trading in an effort to ease market uncertainty and help boost the stock market.
Under the investment income tax scheme, set to take effect next year, capital gains of over 50 million won (US$38,000) from stock investments will be subject to a 20 percent tax, while earnings exceeding 300 million won will be subject to a 25 percent tax.
“The scheme has increased market instability and made investors confused. It’s doubtful if any potential partial revision would help erase such uncertainties,” Choi said during a meeting with reporters Monday.
“I believe that it is needed to review many tax schemes regarding the stock market from scratch, while not implementing the investment tax,” he said, noting taxation regarding the financial market should consider potential impacts on assets transfer and broader economic circumstances, rather than focusing on taxation eq
uity.
President Yoon Suk Yeol has pledged to abolish the tax, stressing that lifting capital market regulations is needed to erase the “Korea discount,” where South Korean companies have lower valuations than their global peers.
The ruling People Power Party voices supports for the abolition, while the main opposition Democratic Party, which holds a controlling majority in the National Assembly, is divided over the envisioned scheme.
Critics say scrapping the scheme will be another tax cut for the rich despite falling tax revenue and a fiscal deficit.
Source: Yonhap News Agency