Bán hàng trên Facebook sẽ phải đăng ký kinh doanh, kê khai thuế

TQ cũng thế, nghiên cứu luật quy định từ năm 2013...
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Making a quick buck online could become a thing of the past for China’s online sellers, who may have to the register with authorities and pay tax if a draft law being considered by the country’s top lawmakers is passed.

...the regulation would require most vendors to get approval before selling on Alibaba-owned Taobao, China’s largest online shopping site, or social media platforms like Weibo and WeChat. Vendors selling handicrafts, agricultural products, or skills such as language tutoring, however, would not have to register (bán hàng thủ công mỹ nghệ, sản phẩm nông nghiệp, hay dạy ngoại ngữ không phải đăng ký).

Legislators began working on the proposed regulation in 2013 and first put it to the committee last year, before soliciting feedback from the public. The goal is to facilitate e-commerce growth, maintain market order, and protect shoppers from fakes and scammers.

Backers of the law say it would bring online shopping regulations in line with offline rules that require vendors to register their businesses and pay tax, but legislators opposed to the law argue that there should be more exemptions (nên có nhiều trường hợp loại trừ, miễn), as the rules in their current state would hamper e-commerce growth...

Tags: china

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