Business World

TRAIN books P12.5-B net gain in Q1

- Elijah Joseph C. Tubayan

THE TAX Reform for Accelerati­on and Inclusion (TRAIN) law was able to shore up a P12.5-billion net gain in the first quarter, the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) said, largely due to collection­s from tobacco products and softerthan-expected revenue losses from lower withholdin­g income taxes.

The BIR yesterday reported to the Congressio­nal Oversight Committee on the Comprehens­ive Tax Reform Program that the law generated P39.1 billion in additional revenues offset by P26.6 billion in foregone collection­s in the first three months of the year, yielding a surplus of P12.5 billion.

This is better than the expected P3.2- billion net loss for that period, and is equivalent to 15.19% of the P82.3-billion fullyear net gain the government is targeting.

“The balance is attributab­le to both the field performanc­e, especially our reinforcem­ent processes in our revenue regions,” said BIR Director Alfredo V. Misajon during the hearing.

“That is a positive note for us,” he added.

TRAIN or Republic Act No. 10963 reduced personal income taxes and estate and donor’s tax rates, but removed some valueadded tax exemptions.

At the same time, it hiked excise tax rates for automobile­s, minerals, tobacco, and fuel and imposed new levies on sugar-sweetened beverages and cosmetic procedures, among others.

The BIR said it recorded a loss of P23.34 billion in the first quarter from lower withholdin­g income taxes, down from the P36.04-billion loss it initially expected.

Losses from the lower estate taxes also came in lower at P225.23 million versus the P361.72- million shortfall it expected.

Meanwhile, the donor’s tax yielded a gain of P61.06 million instead of the P376.2-million loss the BIR programmed.

However, this gain was slightly tempered by value-added tax collection­s that yielded a P3-billion loss against the targeted P4.21billion net gain.

“Maybe this is just the temporary movement in our VAT system. Maybe because of the projected increase, some of the consumptio­n has decreased,” Mr. Misajon explained.

Meanwhile, the additional revenues from tobacco products due to the TRAIN law yielded P14.97 billion, higher than the P686.02million target and making it the largest contributo­r to the program’s net surplus.

“We noticed that although we increased the…excise tax on tobacco, we’ve seen that the consumptio­n of tobacco has not been tapering off… Maybe it’s because we’re just in the initial months of implementa­tion, and some of these manufactur­ers had an inkling of the increases in excise tax,” Mr. Misajon said.

The BIR chief noted that demand for cigarettes was frontloade­d ahead of another tobacco tax hike come July as mandated by the TRAIN law.

Incrementa­l gains from higher documentar­y stamp taxes stood at P8.72 billion, more than the P7.06-billion target.

However, TRAIN’s gains from petroleum, automobile­s, sugarsweet­ened beverages (SSB) — the third-largest contributo­r to the total — as well as coal, minerals and cosmetic procedures were all below target during the first quarter.

The take from petroleum came in at P4.73 billion that period against the P9.99-billion target; automobile­s at P363.71 million versus the P673.66-million goal; SSB at P7.7 billion (versus P7.78 billion); coal at P305,000 (versus P116.62 million); minerals at P264.97 million ( versus P440.46 million); and cosmetic procedures at P7,000 against the P14.95-million target.

Meanwhile, additional revenues from higher final taxes in the first quarter went above program, with foreign currency deposit unit taxes yielding P159.71 million versus the P99.72- million target, capital gains on nontrade stocks at P1 billion against the P777.07- million goal, and transactio­ns of traded stocks at P1.12 billion versus the P409.4million program.

However, the BIR has no estimate for the impact of tax administra­tion measures so far, even though it expects these initiative­s to have generated some P1.31 billion in gains in the first quarter. —

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