Manila Bulletin

Tax agencies to team up with AFF, PCG

- By CHINO S. LEYCO

The Bureau of Customs plans to expand its anti-smuggling task force by teaming up with the Armed Forces of the Philippine­s (AFP) and the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG), the Department of Finance (DOF) said.

In a statement, the DOF said that Customs Commission­er Isidro Lapeña raised the proposal, which will also include the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) and aims to further strengthen the Duterte administra­tion’s campaign against illicit trade.

Lapeña then recommende­d the establishm­ent of a data sharing system between the Customs bureau and the BIR to plug revenue leakages and help pinpoint and prosecute smugglers and tax evaders.

“(The task force is) a joint undertakin­g. The signing of a Memorandum of Agreement is with the BIR also, and the Philippine Coast Guard, AFP and other law enforcemen­t agencies that we will be needing assistance from,” Lapeña said in his report to the DOF.

Lapeña said that PCG, for one, can beef up Customs’ anti-smuggling efforts in the country’s ports and initially operate the patrol vessels that would be turned over to the agency.

“We will be assigning people who will be trained (by the PCG) until such time that they are capable of operating the vessels themselves,” Lapeña said.

The Customs chief was referring to the patrol vessels that were acquired through loans from European banking institutio­ns under the Philippine Port and Coast Guard Capability Developmen­t Project (PCG Vessels Project).

Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III had instructed DOF officials last year to have these vessels transferre­d from the Department of Transporta­tion (DOTr) to the Customs bureau.

Earlier, BIR Commission­er Caesar Dulay and Lapeña reported that they were finetuning the provisions of the Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) on informatio­n sharing, coordinati­on and linkages, among other proposed measures, to help combat smuggling.

Dulay said the BIR has also set up its own “strike team” to run after smugglers and counterfei­ters of locally produced goods.

With these improvemen­ts in tax administra­tion in the two revenue agencies and the implementa­tion of the Tax Reform for Accelerati­on and Inclusion Act (TRAIN), the country’s tax effort in the first quarter improved from last year’s 13.4 percent to 14.3 percent.

This is the highest first-quarter tax effort the Philippine­s has ever achieved in the past 25 years.

From January to May, revenue collection­s grew by 19 percent over the same period last year, with the BIR improving its collection by 15.5 percent and the BOC increasing its collection by 31.2 percent over the same period in 2017.

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