Sunday 27 March 2022

Thailand Issues New Incentives to Attract Foreign Investors, Professionals, and Retirees & Amendments to Thailand’s Public Limited Companies Act

1. Foreign investors, professionals, and retirees will be able to enjoy a number of new incentives in Thailand, as the government seeks to attract high-earning overseas residents to help the country’s COVID-19 recovery.

2. Thailand’s cabinet passed a resolution on September 14, 2021, introducing immigration, tax, and land ownership incentives aimed at foreign investors and skilled professionals. The incentives are part of an effort to stimulate Thailand’s economy which has been badly impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic.

3. According to a government spokesperson, the government expects the incentives to attract over a million foreign investors and professionals within five years, contributing over 1 trillion baht (US$30 billion) to the economy.

4. The incentives come in three categories: immigration, tax, and real estate.

5.  In May 2021, Thailand’s Cabinet approved the draft amendments to the country’s Public Limited Companies Act in a bid to modernize the corporate process.

Saturday 19 March 2022

The Philippines Amends its Foreign Investment Act & Retail Trade Liberalization Act to Attract Foreign Investment

1. On March 2, 2022, President Rodrigo Duterte signed Republic Act No. 11647 (Act 11647), which amends the Foreign Investment Act (FIA), also known as Republic Act No. 7042. The amendments aim to promote and attract foreign investments by allowing, for the first time, international investors to set up and fully own domestic enterprises (including micro and small enterprises) in the Philippines.

2. Further, another amendment includes the establishment of an Inter-Agency Investment Promotion Coordination Committee (IIPCC) tasked with integrating the promotion activities to encourage foreign investment.

3. On December 10, 2021, the President of the Philippines approved the final amendments to the Retail Trade Liberalization Act (RTLA), or Republic Act No. 11595. The bill reduces the minimum paid-up capital requirements for foreign retail enterprises, removes the requirement for a certificate of pre-qualification to the Philippine Board of Investments (BOI), and lowers the investment requirements for each store owned by a foreign enterprise.

4. These measures are aimed at attracting greater foreign investment in the retail sector, which before the pandemic, accounted for 23 percent of the total services industry with a total gross value added of PHP 1 trillion (US$ 20 billion). Full recovery of the Philippines consumer and retail sector is expected to occur in 2022, with growth predicted in 2023.

Saturday 12 March 2022

The Impact of the RCEP on Singapore 2022 Inbound Investment Flows via Special Purpose Acquisition Company (SPAC)

1. The RCEP (Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership) is a free trade area that includes China, all ten ASEAN nations, Japan, South Korea, Australia, and New Zealand. Collectively, this includes 30 percent of the world’s population and 30 percent of its GDP. The agreement came into effect on January 1, this year.

2. There were in fact extraordinary developments in the country during Q4 2021, prior to the January RCEP launch. Singapore introduced a number of actual and planned changes to its stock exchange, saw numerous leading financial services players form hubs, the formation of a regional COVID vaccine JV launched, and its regulators tested in the crypto segment. 

Sunday 6 March 2022

Rules for Tax Incentive for Manufacturers of Pharmaceutical Products Scheme Gazetted

1. The Income Tax (The Incentive for Manufacturers of Pharmaceutical Products Scheme) Rules 2022 [P.U.(A) 34/2022] (‘Rules’) were gazetted on 17 February 2022 and are deemed to have effect from the year of assessment 2021.

2. https://lom.agc.gov.my/ilims/upload/portal/akta/outputp/1723693/PUA34_2022.pdf