Business World

Tax reform not to blame for FEMSA exit, DoF says

- Arjay L. Balinbin

FINANCE Undersecre­tary Karl Kendrick T. Chua expressed doubts that tax reform was behind the divestment of a Mexican bottler that held the Philippine franchise for Coca-Cola products.

“I do not know the real reason why they decided to leave the Philippine­s. The first package of tax reform also imposed taxes on fuel companies and coal producers, and cigarette manufactur­ers, but they didn’t leave,” he said at a briefing on tax reform, referring to the decision of Coca-Cola FEMSA S.A.B de C.V. to sell its stake in the Philippine bottling operation for Coke products back to The Coca-Cola Co.

“Maybe FEMSA left for some other reason. In our opinion, tax reform was not very related” to the divestment decision,” Mr. Chua said.

This ran counter to comments made by Coca-Cola FEMSA chief executive officer John Santa Maria Otazua in an Aug. 17 teleconfer­ence with investors. Mr. Santa Maria said the new tax on drinks sweetened with high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS), which is used in Coca-Cola production, dampened imports of the sweetener and caused prices of cane sugar to rise.

The tax reform law “put restrictio­ns on sweetener imports” and led to “soaring local prices of sugar. Prices of sugar have been up, up to 50%,” he said.

Mr. Chua said President Rodrigo R. Duterte and Speaker Gloria M. Arroyo are serious in bringing about tax reform regardless of the difficulti­es in getting the legislatio­n approved, amid resistance from legislator­s concerned about its impact on prices.

“The President has said that tax reform is critical to his program, while Speaker Arroyo is taking it very seriously,” Mr. Chua said, adding that the Department of Finance (DoF) will continue to work with legislator­s to effect the passage of the necessary measures.

The first package of tax reform was known as Tax Reform for Accelerati­on and Inclusion (TRAIN) and focused on lowering income tax rates, freeing up disposable income for spending on consumer goods. On the other hand, TRAIN also raised taxes on fuel, sweetened drinks, automobile­s, and coal, among others.

Mr. Chua was speaking at a briefing on the progress of tax reform, the second package of which has been named the Tax Reform for Attracting Better and Higher Quality Opportunit­ies (TRABAHO) bill. TRABAHO focuses on rationaliz­ing investment incentives while lowering corporate income tax.

Asked to comment on the House version of the TRABAHO bill, Mr. Chua said: “We continue to reach out to the Congress and the public in order to arrive at a reform that balances all interests.”

The DoF, Mr. Chua said, had intended the second tax reform package to be revenue neutral. “So for every peso that we save in unnecessar­y incentives, the idea is… to return (the savings) to those 90,000 small businesses who are paying 30% and now will pay less,” he said, adding that the DoF version imposed revenue-performanc­e conditions on corporate tax cuts. The House, however, wants an “automatic reduction of two percentage points every two years,” he added. —

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