Business World

DoF mulls 3 kinds of tax amnesty offer

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THE GOVERNMENT is considerin­g three kinds of tax amnesty as part of an overall bid to overhaul taxation in the country, the Finance chief said on Tuesday.

“There are three kinds of amnesty we want,” Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III told reporters on the sidelines of the launch of the Philippine­s’ hosting of the Asian Developmen­t Bank annual meeting in May.

“We want to give an amnesty for the estate taxes that were not paid so that assets will become developabl­e,” Mr. Dominguez explained.

“Second, we want amnesty for those who have not paid the correct taxes in the past, and that will be based most likely on your total declared assets,” he added, referring to a planned general tax amnesty.

“You’ll know if you paid the right taxes and we’ll not ask you what you did not pay. Based on your assets, you’ll pay this amount and we’ll not look anymore into your accounts.”

Already being implemente­d starting January is Republic Act No. 10963, or the Tax Reform for Accelerati­on and Inclusion Act that is the first of up to five planned packages designed to shift the burden to those who can afford to pay more and cover about a fourth of the government’s P8.13-trillion infrastruc­ture developmen­t program until 2022, when President Rodrigo R. Duterte ends his six-year term. Among others, that first package

imposes a flat six percent estate tax. Before that, the National Internal Revenue Code of 1997 exempted from tax a net estate value of up to P200,000, and levied 5%, 8%, 11%, 15% and 20% depending on which bracket the property belonged.

Settling unpaid estate tax will unlock properties with such liabilitie­s for developmen­t for residentia­l or commercial purposes, Mr. Dominguez said.

Collection of appropriat­e estate taxes has been elusive for the Bureau of Internal Revenue, with the past administra­tion estimating that annual take could actually go up to P10-50 billion from less than P1 billion currently.

The Department of Finance (DoF) previously said it was supporting House Bill No. 7105 general amnesty measure pending in Congress.

The department is also considerin­g a form of amnesty that will cover existing tax evasion cases, saying it will seek authority from Congress to collect tax settlement amounts “below what is allowable in the law.” —

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