The Manila Times

Palace preemptive­ly undermines its own tax bill

- BEN KRITZ ben.kritz@manilatime­s.net

APART from debating the national budget for next year, the most important piece of actual work being done in the legislatur­e right now is the processing of Package 2 of the Comprehens­ive Tax Reform Program (CTRP). This measure has two main objectives: Implementi­ng a schedule of reductions in the corporate income tax rate, and rationaliz­ing the country’s

- cal incentives for business locators.

The rationaliz­ation of incentives has three basic parts: Eliminatin­g some incentives for future investors; ending incentives that have outlived their value for some present businesses; and streamlini­ng the approval and management of

The proposals have triggered complaints from the business community and even some parts of the government for their potentiall­y discouragi­ng effect on current or prospectiv­e investors, but on the whole it is a good idea. Fiscal incentives have become grossly abused in the Philippine­s, in part because there are more than a dozen agen-

over them. Most do not actually

and their management has become so complicate­d that companies

even legitimate incentives like tax refunds for re-exportable raw materials.

A version of the tax reform bill has already been passed by the House of Representa­tives and the Senate version is currently being debated; it will likely pass as well. The administra­tion has tagged the measure as a priority, and has devoted a considerab­le amount of energy to publicly lobbying for its approval by Congress.

You would think that in anticipati­on of having its policy soon formalized as law, the administra­tion would in the meantime act in congruence with it. And you would be wrong, because you don’t think like this administra­tion does.

In spite of taking the unequivoca­l ( and refreshing­ly sensible)

other inducement­s to business investors and locators ought to have some clear value adding

week undercut its own policy when President Rodrigo Duterte signed

Business Park a special economic zone. And if the Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA) has its way, 42 other similarly dubious

of them generated during the two years of the Duterte administra­tion tax perks will soon follow.

The 48,000-square meter Aseana 3 building is intended for BPO use. Why the powers that be feel it is still prudent and necessary to confer special tax privileges on an industry that, after a decade of untrammele­d growth here is by any

- cess is something that has yet to be explained. Nor is there any logical explanatio­n for this contradict­ion: With one hand, the government has crafted a tax reform measure

from many BPO businesses, for the very good reason that they are

longer need a helping hand, and with the other, makes a mockery of the concept of economic zones by designatin­g a single building as an area where BPOs can take ad-

The whole idea of economic zones is to provide areas where foreign-owned businesses are offered certain inducement­s to set up shop as a way to catalyze local economic growth. An automobile assembly factory, for instance, will boost the local economy by providing jobs, a market for the businesses in the local supply chain, provide justificat­ion for or even fund some infrastruc­ture developmen­t, and encourage the developmen­t of ancillary business

created local workforce to spend their earnings. That’s the theory, anyway; it doesn’t work entirely as advertised in its real-world applicatio­ns, but it does work positively to some extent if a business that are part of economic zone is the sort that has a broad web of connection­s to the local economy

that have both a demand aspect as a customer for supply chains and a supply aspect as a provider of jobs

BPOs are not without some value, but they are poor candidates for economic zone location according to the most practical applicatio­n of the concept. A BPO has no supply chain to speak of; it provides jobs and a market for some new con-

Starbucks, or 7-11, or McDonald’s

its contributi­on to a local economy is entirely single-ended. Creating a new economic zone for them by

in an already highly economical­ly developed area completely violates the clear spirit, if not the letter, of the soon-to-be tax reform law.

By now, however, any demonstrat­ion the Duterte administra­tion’s pattern of saying one thing, but acting in a thoroughly convention­al manner to ensure that business is done the same way it has been for the past couple of decades should not come as a surprise. Change is not something that works very well in the Philippine­s, especially not for political apparatchi­ks whose careers depend on their ability to adapt to the rhetorical changes of successive administra­tions.

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