Business World

NEDA counting on passage of land use measure, tax reforms this year

- Laforga Beatrice M.

THE National Economic and Developmen­t Authority (NEDA) said it is counting on the passage of priority bills this year, particular­ly the remaining tax reform packages and measures regulating land use and enhancing disaster resiliency.

In a news conference on Monday, NEDA Undersecre­tary Rosemarie G. Edillon said these are among the priority bills that they recommend that Congress pass within the year.

Additional­ly, Economic Planning Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia said reform bills on foreign investment and public services “are actually advancing quite well so we expect them to be passed by midyear because they have been prioritize­d.”

NEDA’s draft of the National Land Use Act (NLUA), meanwhile, has been presented to the Cabinet for approval. If approved, the version will feature the executive branch’s input which could break the Congressio­nal deadlock on the measure, Undersecre­tary Adoracion M. Navarro said.

“We prepared, drafted an executive order and we will discuss it at the Cabinet assistance system meeting on Jan. 22, Wednesday, and then we will still push for legislatio­n,” she said.

“In the President’s mind, this is an urgent bill. He has expressed it four times, 2016-2019 in the State of the Nation Address (SONA) and its something that

he thinks is very important,” Mr. Pernia said.

Further, Ms. Navarro said NEDA is also proposing that comprehens­ive land use plans have a longer, 12-year planning horizon and should also be hazardsens­itive.

“It’s actually something that’s very interestin­g to the president, he wants explicit and clear sanctions on local government officials when they violate NLUA,

and one of the possible violations is not implementi­ng the comprehens­ive land use plan. First not drafting the right comprehens­ive land use plan, and second, not implementi­ng what’s in the comprehens­ive land use plan,” she said.

Meanwhile other bills included under NEDA’s suggested priority reform agenda are the unified penology system, the modernizat­ion of the national library, amendments to the Consumer Act, measures promoting e-vehicles, open access to data transmissi­on and measures promoting technology adoption and innovation.

Also other proposed priority bills cover Philippine maritime zones, archipelag­ic sea lanes and amendments to Build-operate-and-transfer (BOT) law, among others. —

 ?? PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS ?? SOCIOECONO­MIC Planning Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia said marine and coastal resources are underutili­zed, and called for proper management of the sector known as the “blue economy.”
PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS SOCIOECONO­MIC Planning Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia said marine and coastal resources are underutili­zed, and called for proper management of the sector known as the “blue economy.”

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