Business World

PEZA-registered investment pledges down 55% in 9 months

- Janina C. Lim

THE Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA) said investment pledges in the first nine months of 2018 declined over 55% with potential investors taking a wait-and-see attitude pending the passage of the Tax Reform for Attracting Better and High Quality Opportunit­ies or TRABAHO bill.

Investment pledges totaled P87.85 billion in the first nine months, well below the yearearlie­r P196.46 billion.

The number of proposed projects registered for incentives fell nearly 18% to 362.

“Existing investors are not expanding. New investment pledges are not coming because everybody is waiting for what will be the result of the TRAIN (Tax Reform for Accelerati­on and Inclusion) 2,” PEZA Director-General Charito B. Plaza said in a phone interview on Thursday.

The TRABAHO bill is the second tranche of the tax reform program, initially called TRAIN.

“Manufactur­ing, etc., dropped,” Mr. Plaza added.

Meanwhile, the informatio­n technology sector, consisting mostly of business process outsourcin­g (BPO) firms and contact centers, accounted for the bulk of investment­s generated during the period, rising 8.82% year-on-year to P12.39 billion.

PEZA had not provided a breakdown of investment pledges by sector or by quarter at deadline time.

Exports by PEZA-registered enterprise­s, covering the eight months to August, rose 6.43% year-on-year to $35.79 billion.

Workers directly employed by PEZA-registered firms in the first eight months were estimated at 1.46 million, up 6.79%.

Informatio­n Technology and Business Process Associatio­n of the Philippine­s (ITBPAP) President and CEO Rey E. Untal said the wait-and-see attitude towards the TRABAHO bill, which seeks to rationaliz­e investment incentives, has been dampening new activity in the sector, and forcing a rethink of expansion plans.

“A number of companies had a wait-and-see attitude [starting] last year, and I would like to think until now… the uncertaint­y had created that reaction,” Mr. Untal said Thursday in an interview at the group’s headquarte­rs in Taguig City.

PEZA currently grants incentives including income tax holidays of up to eight years, and a perpetual 5% tax on gross income earned, and a zero value-added tax on local purchases, among others.

The TRABAHO bill is targeting revenue leakage via the grant of incentives deemed unwarrante­d and proposes to make incentives time-bound and performanc­e-based.

The TRABAHO Bill will gradually reduce the corporate income tax (CIT) rate to 20% from the current 30% over a 10year period. —

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