Business World

Taxmen hone focus on select goods amid anti-smuggling drive

- EJCT

THE GOVERNMENT has ordered taxmen “to train their sights” on certain commoditie­s as it steps up its crackdown on big-time smugglers, the Department of Finance (DoF) said in a statement yesterday.

The press release said Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III ordered Customs Commission­er Isidro S. Lapeña and Internal Revenue Commission­er Caesar R. Dulay to “focus on rice, fuel, steel, cigarettes and other food and agricultur­al product such as chicken, onions and garlic in beefing up the government­s’ efforts to combat smuggling.”

He issued the directive after Mr. Lapeña last week briefed DoF’s Executive Committee, which Mr. Dominguez heads, on a planned task force with the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) that will step up the government’s drive against big-time smugglers.

“I think you should focus on fuel, rice and other agricultur­al products, including chicken, onions, garlic,” the statement quoted Mr. Dominguez as telling Messrs. Lapeña and Dulay.

“And then there is steel, and then cigarettes. I’m sure the smuggling of cigarettes will go up now.”

Mr. Dominguez noted that after Mighty Corp. closed operations as part of its agreement with the government

to settle its tax liabilitie­s, he has been receiving reports of cigarette smuggling as illegal traders rush in to fill the void left by the company, which had sold tobacco products at rock-bottom prices, the statement explained.

“Mighty had managed to sell its cigarettes at low prices because of the use of fake tax stamps, which was uncovered by the government through a joint operation by the BoC (Bureau of Customs) and the BIR,” DoF said in its statement.

The company settled its liabilitie­s in income and deficiency excise taxes by paying P25 billion to the government. Total liabilitie­s are expected to reach over P30 billion when the value-added tax and other fees are factored in, the department said.

Mr. Dominguez, who had described Mighty’s payment as the “biggest tax settlement” in the country’s history, in August ordered both bureaus to nab and build cases against big-time tax evaders that could each add P2030 billion to state coffers. —

 ??  ?? CUSTOMS men use tax stamp readers in their checks on cigarettes for sale.
CUSTOMS men use tax stamp readers in their checks on cigarettes for sale.

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