Former DoF officials support second package of tax reform
FORMER officials of the Department of Finance (DoF) have expressed their support for the second tax reform package ahead of public hearings set to start this week.
Former Secretaries and Undersecretaries of the DoF issued a statement on Friday that the government should “urgently pursue” the proposal to cut corporate income tax rates and modernize the fiscal incentives regime.
“We continue to share the country’s goal of becoming a prosperous, predominantly middle- class society. Achieving this will require an equitable tax system and robust public investment, which the first package of reforms began to address,” they said in their statement.
“Alongside strong and strategic public spending, tax policy must enable a fair, competitive, and growing business sector. Standard rates must be reasonable, to encourage compliance, broaden the tax base, unburden small and medium enterprises, and create strong domestic value chains. At the same time, fiscal incentives must be treated as a public investment: the economic benefits must outweigh the costs in foregone revenue, and the tax incentive regime must align with the country’s socioeconomic priorities,” they added.
The first public hearing for the second tax reform program is scheduled for Tuesday, about four months since the DoF submitted to the House of Representatives its proposal, and two months since ways and means committee chairperson Dakila Carlo E. Cua (Quirino), together with Representatives Aurelio D. Gonzales, Jr. (Pampanga 3rd district), and Raneo E. Abu (Batangas 2nd district filed their own versions on March 21.
House Bill No. 7458 mainly seeks an annual 1 percentage point cut in the corporate income tax (CIT) rate from the current 30% to 20%, while the Finance department’s proposal features a 1 percentage point cut until the rate hits 25%, conditional upon collecting 0.15% of gross domestic product, or about P26 billion, from the streamlining of incentives.
Both proposals seek to put the tax holidays granted by various investment promotion agencies into a “single menu” under the supervision of the Fiscal Incentives Review Board co-chaired by the Finance and Trade departments, and replace the current perpetual 5% tax on gross income earned to a time-bound 15% tax on net taxable income, while removing those that do not qualify under the government’s medium-term Strategic Investment Priorities Plan.
Mr. Cua said last week that his committee will seek proof from affected stakeholders on which incentives yield benefits the economy to warrant its possible retention.
Moreover, the former DoF officials said that the current fiscal incentives regime was made “complex and costly made by years of neglect and abuse.”
They also said that the proposal would “spur countryside development and public investment,” noting the provision of granting a one-year relocation tax holiday for firms moving out of Metro Manila and selected areas in Central Luzon and Calabarzon, and “superior incentives for lagging regions.” —