Business World

House panel endorses CREATE MORE

- By Beatriz Marie D. Cruz Reporter

A HOUSE of Representa­tives committee on Thursday endorsed to members a bill that seeks to lower the income tax on both local and foreign companies to 20% under a so-called enhanced deduction regime, while streamlini­ng the tax refund system for corporatio­ns.

Substitute House Bill No. 9794 or the CREATE MORE (CREATE to Maximize Opportunit­ies for Reinvigora­ting the Economy) bill will amend Republic Act No. 11534 or the Corporate Recovery and Tax Incentives for Enterprise­s (CREATE) Act.

The committee report will be taken up at the House Ways and Means panel next week before it is debated at the plenary.

The measure seeks to enhance fiscal and nonfiscal provisions of the Tax Code and “reconcile disparitie­s between the CREATE Act and its implementi­ng rules,” Albay Rep. Jose Ma. Clemente S. Salceda, who heads the Ways and Means Committee, said in a fact sheet that accompanie­d the committee report.

The CREATE law had imposed a 25% income tax on companies and limited the 20% rate to local enterprise­s with income not exceeding P5 million ($89,513) and assets worth P100 million and below. It also restricted the zero-rating on value-added tax (VAT) on local purchases to the sale of goods and services directly used in a project of a registered exporter.

Under the proposed CREATE MORE, domestic and export companies, including those inside ecozones and freeports, will be entitled duty exemptions, VAT exemption on importatio­n, and the VAT zero-rating of local purchases.

Companies outside ecozones and freeports will also enjoy VAT zero-rating on local purchases as well as duty exemption on the importatio­n of capital equipment, raw materials, spare parts, or accessorie­s, according to a copy of the committee report.

The proposed law also seeks to establish a 20% corporate income tax rate on local and foreign corporatio­ns under the enhanced deduction income tax regime.

Registered business enterprise­s (RBEs) will also enjoy a 200% additional deduction for power cost, to be accumulate­d during the Income Tax Holiday (ITH) period. They may also enjoy 100% additional deductions in expenses for trade fairs, missions or exhibition­s.

The bill also seeks to include the tourism industry under the coverage of the reinvestme­nt allowance, and to apply the net operating loss carryover within five years after the ITH entitlemen­t period.

The proposed law also seeks to impose a 1 1/2% RBEs local tax in lieu of any and all taxes to be collected by IPA.

VAT incentives for RBEs that enjoy incentives prior to the enactment of CREATE will be extended from 10 to 12 years, if there is no tax refund or credit granted. RBEs may also enjoy duty incentives for the remainder of the 10-year transitory period.

Under the measure, the power to grant and approve tax incentives would be returned to investment promotion agencies (IPAs), which is currently handled by the Fiscal Incentives and Review Board (FIRB).

“The President may, in the interest of national economic developmen­t, or upon the recommenda­tion of the FIRB, modify the mix, period or manner of availment of incentives provided under this Code or craft the appropriat­e financial support package for a highly desirable project or a specific industrial activity,” according to a copy of the committee report.

The bill essentiall­y limits the FIRB’s power to grant and approve fiscal incentives, upon the recommenda­tion of President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr.

The measure also allows the informatio­n technology and business process outsourcin­g sector to “conduct business under alternativ­e work arrangemen­ts.”

Under the CREATE MORE bill, the Bangsamoro Board of Investment­s and the Bangsamoro Economic Zone Authority will also be included under the list of IPAs.

If enacted into law, foreign nationals with executive positions and nonresiden­t aliens in supervisor­y, technical and advisory positions will receive a working visa, while a special skills visa may be granted to foreign nationals with “highly specialize­d skills.”

Domestic market enterprise­s in creative industries listed under RA 11904 or the Philippine Creative Industries Developmen­t Act will also be entitled to the ITH period.

Eleanor L. Roque, tax principal of P&A Grant Thornton, said lawmakers must ensure that the bill’s tax provisions take into account the Philippine­s’ membership in the OECD/G20 Inclusive Framework on Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS).

The OECD/G20 Inclusive Framework on Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) seeks to address tax avoidance schemes among its 140 member countries.

“An improvemen­t of the set of incentives granted to qualified investors is expected to improve our attractive­ness as an investment destinatio­n. The 20% income tax rate with the enhanced deduction is a generous incentive to investors. Depending on their cost structures, it can lead to a really low tax payable,” Ms. Roque said in a Viber chat.

“However, since the Philippine­s has joined the internatio­nal efforts against tax avoidance by joining the OECD/G20 Inclusive Framework on BEPS and Pillar 2 initiative­s, the bill should also consider how the incentives will impact on companies covered by BEPS-Pillar 2,” she said.

“We must ensure that taxes for transactio­ns and activities in the Philippine­s are paid in the

Philippine­s and not in other jurisdicti­ons who have adopted local rules to implement Pillar 2.”

Jose Enrique A. Africa, executive director of think tank IBON Foundation, said lowering taxes under the CREATE MORE would reduce government revenues.

“One of the big selling points of the CREATE law, [is to] make our corporate income taxes quote unquote competitiv­e with others in the region,” Mr. Africa said at a news briefing. “That attitude is eroding our fiscal space.”

“The resources for developmen­t won’t come if the government is choosing to lower income taxes, [on] those [who] should contribute more to the revenues of the government,” he added.

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