Business World

House sends proposed mining tax reform back to DoF

- By Charmaine A. Tadalan and Elijah Joseph C. Tubayan Reporters

A PROPOSAL to give government a bigger share in mining revenues goes back to square one, as House Speaker Gloria M. Arroyo on Thursday asked the Department of Finance (DoF) to submit a new draft that would consider inputs from miners.

“I will ask the industry to talk to the DoF… and let the DoF come back with a new draft in three days’ time; otherwise, we do our own,” Ms. Arroyo said at a hearing of the House of Representa­tives Ways and Means committee meeting.

The panel was scheduled to discuss the still-unnumbered substitute bill that consolidat­ed House Bills 7994 and 422, titled: “An Act Establishi­ng the Fiscal Regime for Mining Industry” and authored by committee chairman Rep. Estrellita B. Suansing of Nueva Ecija’s first district and committee member Rep. Romero S. Quimbo of Marikina City’s second district, respective­ly.

Ms. Arroyo recalled that when Gloria L. Tan-Climaco, director of Filminera Resources Corp. and member of the Chamber of Mines of the Philippine­s (CoMP) board of trustees, had approached her “two days ago” to say “that the measure, as you are preparing it, is going to kill the industry,” she told the official: “Do not tell me that. This is an administra­tion measure. Tell it to the DoF.”

“And she said, ‘but I told (Finance Secretary Carlos G.) Sonny Dominguez’ and — listen to this DoF officials — she showed me the text, ‘That is not my priority. That is GMA’s priority,’” Ms. Arroyo recounted, referring to her initials.

“Now, since you’re all here, since it is not his priority — he just stated it verbally — but it is the President’s priority as he (Pres. Rodrigo R. Duterte) said in the SoNA (State of the Nation Address), therefore, we will come up with a mining bill.”

Ms. Suansing then asked DoF officials attending Thursday’s hearing to “Please clarify and inform the Speaker that this is not his (Mr. Dominguez’s) priority officially.”

Sought for comment, Mr. Dominguez downplayed the issue as “a misunderst­anding.”

“If the mining (bill) is ready to be passed then we respect House decision to pass it,” Mr. Dominguez told reporters in a mobile phone message.

“Then next priority is (tax) amnesty, [further increases in] alcohol, tobacco, MVUC (Motor Vehicle Users Charge), financial taxes and [uniform] property validation in that order.”

Finance Assistant Secretary Ma. Teresa S. Habitan, who attended the hearing, said in a mobile phone message that Ms. Arroyo’s request was “not an ultimatum, just clarificat­ion on the priorities of the bills.”

Asked when DoF will submit a new draft bill, she replied: “Version naman namin ‘yung Suansing bill (is our version).”

Mining tax restructur­ing was one of the tax reforms the DoF submitted to Congress in late July in hopes of securing legislativ­e approval by yearend, before lawmakers turn their attention to preparatio­ns for the May 2019 mid-term elections.

Asked whether the DoF would consider miners’ suggestion­s to take into considerat­ion the varied cost structures of extracting various ores, Finance Undersecre­tary Karl Kendrick T. Chua told reporters late Wednesday on the sidelines of plenary House discussion­s on the DoF’s budget for 2019: “If there are better suggestion­s, we’ll review and study the proposals.”

“If they want other [schemes], that’s being studied… when there is a proposal its always being studied.”

Among others, DoF-backed HB 7994 proposes a three percent royalty based on the market value of gross output of mines outside mineral reservatio­ns in the first three years of the effectivit­y of the measure, increasing to four percent in the fourth year and then five percent in the fifth year onward, on top of all other national and local taxes.

CoMP has said that the government should first regulate illegal small-scale miners, arguing that they account for bulk of uncollecte­d industry revenues.

Ms. Arroyo said on Thursday that she supports the phased royalty scheme, and that she has “a proposed provision that says ‘open-pit mining, as defined here in this Act, is prohibited and any mining tenement that will not comply with DAO (Department Administra­tive Order) shall take steps to comply with the DAO within a period allowed by the DENR (Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources).”

“And within that period, they must pay an excise tax of such and such an amount which is the one you were saying was prohibitiv­e,” she added.

In the same hearing, CoMP Chairman Gerard H. Brimo, chairman and chief executive officer of Nickel Asia Corp., said: “I can categorica­lly say without any doubt, it’s going to dry up investment­s in the mineral sector and the other problem that we are going to be faced with is that there are some operations — particular­ly the copper and gold — that are suffering under the current low prices.”

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