Daily Tribune (Philippines)

DoJ: WFH strips ecozone perks

The DoJ chief issued the legal opinion at the request of Presidenti­al Management Staff Undersecre­tary for Legal and Monitoring Rodolfo John Robert Pallatao IV

- BY ALVIN MURCIA @tribunephl_alvi

With the Covid-19 pandemic over, registered business enterprise­s, or RBEs, in economic zones allowing a work from home setup should not get tax incentives under Republic Act, or RA,11534, otherwise known as the Corporate Recovery and Tax Incentives for Enterprise­s, or CREATE, Act.

Justice Secretary Jesus Crispin Remulla in a legal opinion dated 3 January 2024, said that “Section 309 of RA 11534 specifical­ly requires registered projects or activities under an Investment Promotion Agency, or IPA, administer­ing an economic zone or freeport to be exclusivel­y conducted or operated within the geographic­al boundaries of the zone or freeport, and any project or activity conducted or performed outside the zone or free port shall not be entitled to the incentive under the CREATE Act.”

The DoJ chief issued the legal opinion at the request of Presidenti­al Management Staff Undersecre­tary for Legal and Monitoring Rodolfo John Robert Pallatao IV.

The legal opinion was sought due to the conflictin­g stand of five government agencies, the Department of Trade and Industry, or DTI, the Philippine Economic Zone, or PEZA, the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority, or NEDA, the Fiscal Incentives Review Board, or FIRB and the Office of the Presidenti­al Adviser on Investment and Economic Affairs on remote work among RBEs, particular­ly in the Informatio­n Technology and Business Process Management, or IT-BPM, sector after the state of emergency due to the pandemic has been lifted.

Must be within zone

In issuing the legal opinion, Remulla cited Section 309 of RA 11534 which stated: “A qualified registered project or activity under an Investment Promotion Agency administer­ing an economic zone or freeport shall be exclusivel­y conducted or operated within the geographic­al boundaries of the zone or freeport being administer­ed by the Investment Promotion Agency in which the project or activity is registered…any project or activity conducted or performed outside the geographic­al boundaries of the zone or freeport shall not be entitled to the incentives provided in this Act, unless such project or activity is conducted or operated under another Investment Promotion Agency.”

“Business enterprise­s located in the economic or freeport zone must continue to conduct their activities within the zone boundaries if they wish to continue availing of their tax incentives under the CREATE Act,” Remulla said.

He pointed out that “these enterprise­s are not prohibited from adopting a WFH arrangemen­t but will no longer be eligible to continue enjoying the tax incentives.”

Remulla, however, acknowledg­ed that there exists RA 11165, the Telecommut­ing Act, that was signed into law on 20 December 2018 and concerns “work from an alternativ­e workplace with the use of telecommun­ications and/or computer technologi­es.”

He said that in the event of conflict between the two laws, the provisions of RA 11534 which was signed into law on 26 March 2021 should prevail “being the last expression of the legislativ­e will.”

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