Business World

Mighty’s might

The best deterrent to tax evasion is indicting and jailing prominent and bigtime tax evaders. This is not going to happen. Mighty is getting off scot free.

- FILOMENO S. STA, ANA III

Amost disturbing developmen­t that will affect revenue collection and even the credibilit­y of the tax reform is the Department of Justice’s (DoJ) dismissal of the tax evasion cases against Mighty Corp. The DoJ justifies the dismissal in light of the Bureau of Internal Revenue’s (BIR) withdrawal of its complaints against Mighty.

Mighty was caught using fake tax stamps three times. A tax stamp is a marker that proves that the excise tax on the cigarette pack has been paid.

The total tax liabilitie­s of Mighty for the three cases amount to P37.88 billion. In one raid of a Mighty warehouse in San Ildefonso, Bulacan, the authoritie­s discovered that all the 530,000 packs they inspected had fake stamps. The warehouse itself was not legally registered.

The BIR thus filed civil and criminal cases against Mighty. Which is of course the right thing to do. But Mighty has strong political connection­s.

In late 2016, the House of Representa­tives railroaded the passage of a weak tobacco tax bill that favors Mighty. The bill contradict­s the present law that has moved to a unitary tax rate. In other words, regardless of the prices of different brands, they are taxed the same rate. This Mighty bill reverts to two rates for manufactur­ed tobacco, in which the lower-priced bracket enjoys a lower tax rate.

Mighty was deliberate­ly but artificial­ly pricing its products low to grab market share. But it turned out that Mighty was not paying the right amount of taxes. In this regard, the two-tier system served the Mighty business model that was predicated on tax evasion.

That such a bad bill got the easy approval of the House of Representa­tives suggests the strong political lobby exercised by Mighty. And now, despite being caught for massive tax evasion, Mighty is getting a slap on the wrist.

Mighty finally decided to cease operations and sell its assets to Japan Tobacco, Inc. (JTI) in the

aftermath of the series of tax evasion charges it faced. From the proceeds of the sale, Mighty made a deal with government, settling for P25 billion. The government claims that this has been the biggest tax settlement in history.

But the manner of the tax settlement is discomfort­ing.

To repeat, Mighty’s settlement amounts to P25 billion, but its tax liabilitie­s reached P37.88 billion. Also note that the settlement is way below the revenue earned from the Mighty sale, amounting to P46.8 billion. We can grant for the sake of argument that government wants to settle to avoid a long court battle. In this case, the settlement of the civil case is arguable.

What is plain wrong is for the government, particular­ly the DoJ and the BIR, to drop the criminal case. It sends a signal that government is prone to compromisi­ng tax evasion; that it protects certain vested interests.

One main reason why the Philippine tax effort is low is rampant tax evasion. This has led some quarters to criticize the tax policy reform. They argue that no new taxes are necessary; just run after the tax evaders and improve collection. Sounds nice. But it is a wrong argument. Indeed, government must catch and punish the tax evaders, but this does not cancel out the need for tax policy reform.

In fact, reforming the tax structure like broadening the VAT base and rationaliz­ing fiscal incentives is a means to plug the loopholes that engender tax evasion. Add to that the fact that financing developmen­t is huge, in which tax administra­tion alone will be inadequate to cover.

But this bad compromise with Mighty gives critics ammunition to target government’s hypocrisy. On the one hand, the government is relentless­ly pushing for new taxes, which I welcome. But on the other hand, its laxness in dealing with Mighty is underminin­g the credibilit­y of the reform.

Remember, the best deterrent to tax evasion is indicting and jailing the prominent and big-time tax evaders. This is not going to happen. Mighty is getting off scot free.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines