Business World

DoF says profitable firms enjoyed P86B worth of incentives in 2015

- Elijah Joseph C. Tubayan

THE Department of Finance (DoF) said profitable companies availed of tax incentives worth P86.3 billion in 2015 while smaller companies paid the full 30% corporate income tax, as the department built its case for rationaliz­ing incentives as proposed in pending legislatio­n.

The DoF said companies that received a total of P86.3-billion worth of tax incentives in 2015 also paid out dividends worth P141.8 billion to their shareholde­rs, based on data from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the various investment promotion agencies (IPAs).

“This means that while SMEs (small and medium enterprise­s), which employ about 65% of Filipino workers in the country, have to pay the steep CIT of 30%, the favored big corporatio­ns get sizeable tax breaks that enable them to award huge dividends to their stockholde­rs,” Finance Undersecre­tary Karl Kendrick T. Chua said.

“Filipino taxpayers are, in effect, subsidizin­g the lion’s share of the profits earned by a select group of corporatio­ns that enjoy already redundant incentives under our convoluted CIT (corporate income tax) system,” he added.

“Such data showing that certain enterprise­s declared dividends that are way above the incentives they receive from the government prove that many of them are inherently profitable and no longer need such perks for their businesses to prosper here in the Philippine­s,” he said.

The DoF said in a statement that about 90,000 small and medium-scale enterprise­s (SMEs) and hundreds of thousands micro enterprise­s pay the 30% corporate tax rate, which is the highest in Southeast Asia.

It noted that SMEs in the services sector received P31 billion in income tax incentives but only paid out P47 billion in dividends to their shareholde­rs during the same period.

The DoF said that about 645 registered enterprise­s continue to receive tax incentives after more than 15 years, “proving that investment perks given usually to big or multinatio­nal firms—many of them are inherently profitable—have become redundant and unnecessar­y.”

The DoF is backing the Tax Reform for Attracting Better and High-quality Opportunit­ies (TRABAHO) bill, which rationaliz­es the incentives regime. It was approved by the lower House on final reading on Sept. 10 but pending at committee-level in the Senate.

The bill seeks to cut the corporate income tax rate gradually to 20% by 2029 via a twopercent­age-point reduction every other year starting 2021. —

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