The Manila Times

Duterte’s tax reform: Nothing short of revolution­ary

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2023. (

I don’t think I am exaggerati­ng when I claim that this part of the Duterte tax reform is nothing short of revolution­ary. Such exemption of the poorest workers from income taxes has never been done. Duterte’s TRAIN has been the most sweeping reduction in income taxes ever.

Past presidents of course all had considered such exemptions or reductions as a way of building up their popularity with the people. They all had backed down them that this risked a drastic fall in revenues, which could lead to a have also told them, that, counterint­uitively, such revenues from the lower classes are huge and easiest to collect, since it is the companies themselves that remit the 10 percent withholdin­g taxes.

Perhaps the fact that the tax reform program’s main architect, Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez, unlike nearly all of his predecesso­rs, wasn’t a big-business see only static balance sheets. Dominguez has been for most of his working life a hands-on businessma­n, who intuitivel­y grasped the fact that tax-rate reductions could lead to increased consumptio­n of goods and services, and therefore to economic growth.

But it is not just Dominguez of course who is responsibl­e for the tax reform program. Primarily, it is Duterte’s achievemen­t since, with his overwhelmi­ng popularity, and with the acumen for parliament­ary work of his handpicked House Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez and Senate President Aquilino Pimentel 3rd, that the tax reform bill was passed so quickly and overwhelm of Representa­tives and 17 to 1 in the Senate. The sole vote against the tax reform law was that of Sen. Risa Hontiveros.

The tax reform project was quite wisely launched as soon as Duterte law could be enacted at the height of his political support.

The absurdity of the past income tax rates is obvious in that the highest tax bracket are those earning P42,000 monthly or more. This means that the same tax rate applies whether you’re a lowermiddl­e- class employee earning P42,000 per month or a PLDT or an Ayala executive earning, say, P2 million a month.

The new law drasticall­y changes this, with rising rates for four tiers of income: those earning annually P250,000 but not over P800,000; those earning over P400,000 but not over P800,000; over P800,000 to not over P8 million; and those earning over P8 million.

In Duterte’s mind, his tax reform is about freeing the working class from the burden of taxes, and shifting it to the classes that can afford it, the rich.

Indeed, the main tool for the redistribu­tion of assets in a democratic, capitalist system has been through taxes, so much so that the most equitable countries in the world, such as the Scandinavi­an nations and Canada, impose taxes on the rich to take from them half of their income. In some welfare-state nations, taxes on the transfer of inheritanc­e are very steep so as to encourage billionair­es to invest their wealth more into industries and philanthro­py.

However, the economics behind TRAIN is the belief that a consumptio­n-based tax system, one based on taxing purchases of services and goods, is better than a tax system based on incomes, and even serves to stimulate the economy. Thus, TRAIN, while reducing income taxes, will expand the value-added tax system and will raise tax rates on the purchase of sweetened beverages, fuels, tobacco, coal and luxury cars.

This of course will also hit the poor in terms of higher rates of - guez’s calculatio­ns—to which the Congress obviously agreed by passing the tax-reform law—show that this won’t be big enough to eat into their increased incomes resulting from their being exempted from income taxes.

The big risk in such a program is whether the revenue lost from the reduced income taxes will be bigger than those raised from the consumptio­n tax. Dominguez calculates that the net impact will be - cant part of which will be through for income taxes but for such taxes as donors’ and estate taxes.

But economics is never ever an exact science, and there is really no assurance that Dominguez’s calculatio­ns are correct, and revenues may even fall drasticall­y. But revolution­s are never, as Mao Zedong pointed out, a picnic.

After Duterte’s TRAIN though, I don’t think any president would even think of imposing taxes on the 7 million he has exempted starting next year.

Even just with this liberation of the working classes from its income-tax burden, Duterte in his made his enduring legacy. The new income tax rates starting 2018.

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