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This is how the rich got richer in SG

Hightech88

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Song Boh? Before they finally got caught LOL..:

https://www.channelnewsasia.com/singapore/doctors-iras-income-tax-avoidance-evasion-6207676?

Why three doctors who paid themselves low salaries to dodge taxes failed to convince the courts​

The doctors set up a web of companies to extract profits as tax-exempt dividends rather than taxable salaries.
30 Jun 2026 06:00AM(Updated: 30 Jun 2026 08:05AM)

SINGAPORE: Three specialist doctors who minimised their taxes by paying themselves low salaries while extracting millions in dividends have lost a High Court challenge – and the case shows why such arrangements cross the line.

The doctors, obstetricians and gynaecologists Dr Adrian Tan Chek Jin, Dr Caroline Khi Yu May and Dr Jocelyn Wong Sook Miin, had set up a web of jointly and individually owned companies through corporate restructuring.

They paid themselves monthly salaries of S$5,000 to S$6,000 (US$3,900 to US$4,600) while taking interest-free loans from their companies on top of the dividends.

After an audit, the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS) invoked tax laws to disregard their business arrangement and revise how the doctors would be taxed. The doctors appealed, but the High Court upheld the ruling on Jun 18.

What raised red flags about their arrangement, and what do professionals with similar structures need to know?

HOW IT WORKED​

The three doctors left KK Women's and Children's Hospital in 2004 to set up a joint private practice. They incorporated ACJ Women's Clinic, each holding a third of the shares, and signed employment contracts paying themselves S$5,000 a month.

Over the following decade, each doctor layered additional companies on top of this structure. By 2014, each had set up an individual surgical company of which they were the sole director and shareholder.

These individual companies invoiced patients for inpatient services, while their first company, ACJ Women’s Clinic, invoiced patients for outpatient services.

Setting up new entities also entitled them to claim rebates under the Start-Up Tax Exemption and Partial Tax Exemption schemes.

The doctors signed employment contracts with their surgical companies for S$6,000 a month. But the bulk of the money they took from these companies came in the form of dividends and interest-free loans.

Between 2013 and 2018, Dr Tan received dividends of S$5.14 million from one firm and S$2.35 million from another, plus loans of up to S$3 million, while drawing a monthly salary of S$5,000. That was a fraction of the S$45,600 he had earned each month before moving to private practice.

WHY THE ARRANGEMENT WAS PROBLEMATIC​

The structure exploited the gap between personal and corporate income tax rates. In Singapore, dividends are generally exempt from personal income tax, since the paying company has already been taxed at the corporate rate of 17 per cent. Personal income tax can reach 24 per cent.

"If we interpose a company in between, then the company will be paying 17 per cent tax on that S$1 million,” said Mr P Sivakumar, a director at BR Law.

Such structures are not inherently unlawful. Single-shareholder companies are common across consultancy and professional services fields, noted Ms Ng Chun Ying, a senior partner and head of tax at Dentons Rodyk.

The problem arises when they are used artificially to reduce tax, with no genuine commercial rationale, said Mr Koh Chon Kiat, a partner from Rajah and Tann’s tax team.

In this case, two details were particularly damaging to the doctors' position. First, their salaries were not in line with market rates.

Professionals using such structures should pay themselves an "arm's length wage", meaning remuneration comparable to what an independent employer would pay for the same role, said Mr Vikna Rajah, head of the tax and private client departments at Rajah and Tann.

Dr Tan's S$5,000 monthly salary was roughly 11 per cent of his pay before he entered private practice.

Second, the doctors' salaries remained the same even as their companies' profits grew. This did not make sense because the revenue earned by the companies came from the doctors’ efforts, said Mr Yang Shi Yong, a director with Drew and Napier’s tax and private client services team.

Additionally, since the interest-free loans were made to the doctors as sole directors and shareholders of their own companies, they were under no obligation to repay the funds and could simply write them off, Mr Sivakumar said.

TAX AVOIDANCE VS TAX EVASION​

Tax arrangements like these can attract scrutiny from IRAS and may cross the line into tax avoidance, said Mr Yang.

Tax avoidance refers to structuring one’s affairs to minimise the amount of tax payable using legal means. “It typically involves arrangements that comply with the letter of the law but achieve a tax result that parliament did not intend,” he said.

This is different from tax evasion, which involves deliberately misrepresenting or concealing information. This could include understating income, fabricating deductions or hiding assets.

Tax evasion is a criminal offence, while tax avoidance is not. But both carry real legal consequences, Mr Yang said.

WHAT HAPPENS NOW​

IRAS invoked Section 33 of the Income Tax Act to disregard the doctors' arrangement, treating the income channelled through their companies as personal income taxable at applicable rates.

The Comptroller of Income Tax also raised additional assessments to claw back the rebates the surgical companies received.

Additional assessments were raised for the 2013 to 2018 years, and the tax exemption rebates their surgical companies had claimed were also clawed back.

As of June 2026, the Comptroller has invoked Section 33 in 279 cases, IRAS said in response to CNA's queries. Seven of the cases were heard by the Income Tax Board of Review, four of these were further appealed to the High Court, and all were decided in the Comptroller's favour.

When IRAS successfully invokes this law, the primary consequence is reversing the tax advantages, said Mr Yang. This means that the taxpayer must pay the tax that would have been payable if he had not entered into the beneficial arrangement.

From the year of assessment 2023, a 50 per cent surcharge on the additional tax assessed is imposed when Section 33 is successfully invoked, meaning the financial penalty for detected arrangements now significantly exceeds any tax savings gained.

“Given the sums involved – dividends in the millions and shareholder loans exceeding S$2 million for Dr Tan alone – the additional tax liability would be considerable,” said Mr Yang.

"The practical takeaway is that tax avoidance through corporate structuring is a gamble that does not pay."

In its statement to CNA, IRAS said it takes a firm view of artificial or contrived arrangements put in place to avoid tax.

“Self-employed professionals, like all taxpayers, are expected to ensure that their tax affairs reflect the commercial and economic reality of their arrangements,” it said.
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The hospitals, the doctors have actually gone rogue. Now its following the greed of IRAS and those at the top that kept on taxing
for their huge budget spendings.
 
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Many, many others have been doing something similar.

There's a difference between tax avoidance and tax evasion.

When the govt of a totalitarian regime lacks money, what was usually a 'close one eye' matter becomes a crime. Expect an escalation of frivolous fees, fares and fines for the common folks too. :cool:
 
singapore budget yearly surplus 2025, $15.1 bln, almost double from a year ago
 
I thought tax for the rich low by regional standards.
Lots of highly paid neighbours dump their pay in sinkie and because non domicile, gets no income tax.
 
Tax avoidance is legal. Tax evasion is a crime.

The doctors are guilty of tax avoidance, not tax evasion, otherwise they'd have been prosecuted and jailed.

So the question the court has to answer is: given that the doctors exploited tax loopholes to minimise their tax liabilities without committing a crime, does the law allow IRAS to claw back past years' taxes from them?
 
Most billionaires don't pay taxes. Warren Buffett didn't pay taxes for 3 years in a row. Elon Musk didn't pay any federal income taxes in 2018. Jeff Bezos didn't pay any tax in 2007 and 2011.

Elon Musk, Zuckerberg, Larry Page (and the late Steve Jobs) pay themselves an annual salary of just USD1 to minimise income tax. They borrow against their stocks to buy a house, yacht, private jet, whatever, because selling stocks to finance a purchase means having to pay a hefty capital gains tax.

Billionaires pay remarkably low income taxes relative to their immense wealth because the tax code generally taxes income rather than wealth. Because the vast majority of their fortunes are tied up in assets like stocks and real estate, they can legally minimize or defer taxes by borrowing against those assets rather than selling them to generate taxable income.

The primary legal mechanisms that drive this disparity include:
  • Unrealized Capital Gains: Traditional income, like a salary, is taxed as it is earned. In contrast, the appreciation of assets (like a rising stock price) is classified as an unrealized gain. These gains are not taxed until the asset is sold, allowing billionaires to sit on billions in wealth while technically having very low reported "taxable income".
  • The "Buy, Borrow, Die" Strategy: Instead of selling stock to fund their lifestyles, billionaires frequently take out low-interest, tax-free loans from banks using their appreciated assets as collateral. Because borrowed money does not count as taxable income, they can live luxuriously while legally avoiding income taxes.
  • Write-Offs and Depreciation: Business owners and wealthy investors can frequently structure hobbies or investments as businesses. This allows them to write off massive business losses and rapidly "depreciate" the value of assets like commercial buildings, sports franchises, or racehorses against their tax burdens.
  • Lower Capital Gains Rates: When billionaires do sell assets, the profits are taxed as capital gains rather than ordinary income. In many countries, the top capital gains tax rate is significantly lower than the top rate on standard wages.
 
they learn from US Trumph ... but dont have lawyer teams like Ah Trumph to hoot papayas .... so end up kenna juiced now ... :whistling:
 
they learn from US Trumph ... but dont have lawyer teams like Ah Trumph to hoot papayas .... so end up kenna juiced now ... :whistling:
Trouble is these doctors are rich but not billionaire-rich. You think IRAS dares to touch the Haidilao boss or Saverin or Dyson founder for 'tax minimisation'? I bet these guys pay far less tax than the 3 doctors.
 
Tax avoidance is legal. Tax evasion is a crime.

The doctors are guilty of tax avoidance, not tax evasion, otherwise they'd have been prosecuted and jailed.

So the question the court has to answer is: given that the doctors exploited tax loopholes to minimise their tax liabilities without committing a crime, does the law allow IRAS to claw back past years' taxes from them?

Already mentioned you didnt read properly ah? LOL:

"IRAS invoked Section 33 of the Income Tax Act to disregard the doctors' arrangement, treating the income channelled through their companies as personal income taxable at applicable rates.

The Comptroller of Income Tax also raised additional assessments to claw back the rebates the surgical companies received."
 
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