Business World

Top 10 trends in fiscal program and illicit trade in 2023

- BIENVENIDO S. OPLAS, JR.

Here is this column’s take on the major events and stories on the fiscal condition and shortfalls in revenues related to illicit trade this year.

1. The revised fiscal program released by the Developmen­t Budget Coordinati­on Committee (DBCC) last Friday, Dec. 15, showed that disburseme­nts would rise from P5.3 trillion this year to P7.8 trillion in 2028. It should be noted that disburseme­nts kept rising even when revenues significan­tly declined during the lockdown dictatorsh­ip of 2020-2021.

2. Revenues are rising from P3.8 trillion this year to P6.6 trillion in 2028 but they cannot cope with sustained high spending. So the budget deficit (revenues lower than spending) will remain elevated at P1.5 trillion this year to P1.2 trillion in 2028. The consolatio­n is that the deficit as a percentage of GDP is projected to decline from 6.1% this year to 3% in 2028 (see Table 1).

Budget Secretary Amenah F. Pangandama­n said “certain big spending are in various laws and we have to implement them but we are improving spending utilizatio­n and efficiency, make sure that every program, every action plan that we implement is a make-or-break for our people who are dreaming of better quality and decent lives for a better Philippine­s.”

3. Lower actual revenues than potential revenues are mainly due to leakages, corruption, and product substituti­on. One clear example is the excise tax on tobacco, the most taxed commodity in the country. As tax rates doubled from P25/pack in 2016 to P50/pack in 2021, tax revenues initially increased then started falling in 2022 and by Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) estimates, would further decline in 2023 by up to 20% of 2022’s level. This means tobacco tax revenues will go from P176.5 billion in 2021 to P160.4 billion in 2022, and further down to possibly only P142 billion in 2023. Collection­s until October were only about P120 billion. This is due to users’ substituti­on of legal tobacco with illegal or smuggled tobacco, plus a shift to e-cigarettes both legal and illegal.

4. Tobacco control measures and policies were generally successful across countries in reducing smoking prevalence among adults. In the Philippine­s for instance, from 35% of adults in 2000, tobacco users declined to only 23% in 2020. But this applies only to legal tobacco because consumptio­n of illegal or smuggled tobacco continues to remain high as their prices are so low compared to legal, taxed tobacco. Plus, there is the shift to e-cigarettes.

5. Life expectancy continues to rise across countries including those with high smoking incidence. Consider for example France, where smoking prevalence remained flat at 33% of adults from 2000 to 2020 but where life expectancy has increased from 74 years in 1980 to 82 years in 2021 (see Table 2). One must note that there are many other factors to human mortality and tobacco is one of them but not necessaril­y the main factor.

6. An expanded anti-agricultur­al smuggling bill is now in Congress. It will replace the old “Anti-Agricultur­al Smuggling Act of 2016” (RA 10845) and will cover more agricultur­al products including tobacco, perhaps the most lucrative smuggled products at tens of billions of pesos yearly in foregone taxes from imported tobacco alone.

7. Key legislator­s that championed this bill include Representa­tives Sandro Marcos and Margarita “Migz” Nograles who included tobacco when they filed the bill in the House, and Representa­tives Mark Enverga and Mika Suansing who are pushing the general Anti-Agricultur­al Smuggling Amendments Bill in the House. In the upper chamber, Senator Lito Lapid filed the counterpar­t bill in the Senate, Senator Koko Pimentel ensured the constituti­onality of antiagri smuggling bill, and Senator Cynthia Villar championed it in the Senate, with JV Ejercito as co-author.

8. Illicit trade in e-cigarettes — the case of Flava and Denkat. In a House Committee on Ways and Means public hearing last week, Dec. 12, Committee Chairperso­n Joey Salceda said that “Vape sale is not yet particular­ly classified under PSIC (Philippine Standard Industrial Classifica­tion) … The brands found in the warehouse were all registered with the BIR (RMC 93-2023), with Flava Corporatio­n registerin­g as a ‘manufactur­er’… Flava Corporatio­n, however, is not registered as an importer… TopKing Logistics, which supposedly billed Flava, is also an importer, not a manufactur­er.” Denkat Trading supposedly got its supply from China suppliers then sold them to Flava, and Denkat should pay the excise tax but did not. See also these reports in BusinessWo­rld: “E-cigarette listing, taxing sought” (Dec. 12), “British chamber backs law vs agri smuggling, 5-year EO 10 effectivit­y” (Dec. 14).

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