Manila Bulletin

CMTA’s IRRs seen completed next year

- By CHINO S. LEYCO

The implementi­ng rules and regulation­s (IRR) of the Customs Modernizat­ion and Tariff Act (CMTA) will be contained in about 42 Customs Administra­tive Orders (CAOs) that the government plans to complete by 2018, the Department of Finance (DOF) said.

Finance Undersecre­tary Antonette Tionko, who heads the DOF’s Revenue Operations Group, said that 42 draft CAOs have already been posted in the CMTA microsite www.dof.gov.ph/cmta_ irr, with eight already signed.

She said some of these CAOs may end up being consolidat­ed or some of them may be broken down into separate customs administra­tive or memorandum orders.

The voluminous text of the CMTA, which runs to about 200 pages, had prompted the DOF to issue the IRRs through CAOs issued by the Bureau of Customs (BOC) on a per-topic basis.

Public consultati­ons have been conducted on the CMTA by the BOC and the draft CAOs have been uploaded in the CMTA microsite, which can be accessed through the DOF website, to enable all stakeholde­rs involved to comment and provide their inputs online.

“We did it online so people outside Manila can comment. It's a good process,” Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III said.

Among CAOs already issued by the BOC involve the establishm­ent of the Authorized Economic Operators Program (CAO 5-2017), the clearance of postal items (CAO 3-2017), customs clearance of accompanie­d and unaccompan­ied baggage of travelers and crew (CAO 01-2017).

Other CAOs are conditiona­lly tax- and/ or duty-exempt importatio­n of returning residents and overseas Filipino workers (CAO 06-2016), consolidat­ed shipment of duty- and tax-free ‘balikbayan’ boxes (CAO 05-2016), establishm­ent of an ad- vance ruling system for valuation and rules of origin (CAO-03-2016) and imported goods with de minimis value and not subject to duties and taxes (CAO 02-2016).

“The CAOs relating to the CMTA that are issued by the BOC and approved by the Secretary [of Finance] are issued on a per-topic basis. So there will be, more or less, about 42 CAOs,” Tionko said.

Among the draft CAOs still under study or revision include those involving the clearance process for goods entered under the Customs Bonded Warehousin­g System, rules and regulation­s for customs transit in the customs territory, compulsory acquisitio­n, outsourcin­g of non-sovereign customs function to private entities, rewards to persons instrument­al in the actual collection of additional revenues, assignment and reassignme­nt and designatio­ns of BOC personnel, customs container control division, customs facilities and warehouses and security to guarantee payment of duties and taxes.

Also under study are the draft CAOs on the temporary storage of goods, marking duty, Accredited Informatio­n Processors, customs service fees, onboard couriers, registrati­on of importers, express shipments, cargo manifests, seizure and forfeiture proceeding­s, free zones and transit, disposal of cargoes, relief consignmen­t, customs jurisdicti­on and exercise of police authority, dispute settlement and appellate remedies, among others.

The CMTA microsite also contains informatio­n about, and templates to suggest recommenda­tions on, the proposed IRR of the CMTA.

Republic Act 10863, also known as the Customs Modernizat­ion and Tariff Act (CMTA), which was signed into law in May 30, 2016, is designed to modernize BOC rules and procedures to facilitate trade, cut red tape and corruption, and improve the delivery of BOC-related services.

For inquiries, comments and suggestion­s on the proposed IRR of the law, one can email the CMTA Project Management Office and Secretaria­t at cmta.irr.pmo@customs.gov.ph and cmta_irr@ dof.gov.ph.

The easy-to-navigate microsite contains the drafting process, timelines, and guidelines on the crafting of the IRR, and also includes a list of priority concerns on the CMTA and the point persons assigned to each topic.

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