Philippine Daily Inquirer

Resolving smuggling in a systematic way

- By Ernesto Ordoñez

BEFORE the Aquino administra­tion ends, smuggling must be controlled. With political will, this can be done.

A recent victory against livestock smuggling was achieved with the support of Agricultur­e Secretary Proceso Alcala and Undersecre­tary Jose Reano—124 containers of smuggled pork were apprehende­d in the last few months. Credit should also be given to Bureau of Customs (BOC) Commission­er Alberto Lina and Deputy Commission­er Jessie Dellosa.

Neverthele­ss, these antismuggl­ing victories were sporadical­ly, not systematic­ally, achieved. To do this systematic approach, we must use a public private mechanism establishe­d in 2005. The creation of the Cabinet Oversight Committee Against Smuggling (Cocas) resulted in a 25 percent decrease in smuggling.

Unfortunat­ely, Cocas was abol-

ished in 2006 after it achieved a big purpose. From a 6 percent smuggling rate in 2005, this steadily increased to 36 percent in 2014.

Here is how smuggling estimates are calculated: From the United Nations Trade Statistics, a report is given to the Philippine­s based on informatio­n provided by exporters. This is then compared vis-à-vis the report of the Bureau of Customs (BOC) on the actual volume received.

The difference is underrepor­ting. Many believe this is the smuggling rate. While some imports are exported later on, we should note that the numbers above constitute only 80 percent of total trade. This is from the top 20 countries exporting to the Philippine­s.

Using these numbers, we calculated the smuggling losses and compared them to independen­t estimates. Using tariff and VAT assumption­s and a P45 to the dollar exchange rate, our estimate of a P204 billion smuggling loss for 2012 is 2 percent higher than the P200 billion estimate given by President Aquino in his 2013 State of the Nation Address.

The P169 billion loss, which we estimated for 2011, is 4 percent lower than the P176 billion loss calculated by Global Financial Integrity, a Washington, DC-based think tank.

What is clear is that the rate of underrepor­ting is still increasing. Consequent­ly, so is the damage to our jobs and government revenues.

In 2014, the National Competitiv­eness Council (NCC) created a low-level version of the 2005 Cocas. This NCC Anti-smuggling Committee worked with Commission­er John Philip Sevilla with good results.

Though the lower version of the Cocas partly worked in fighting smuggling, it was a far cry from the 25 percent reduction in smuggling that the high-level Cocas achieved in 2005. This is understand­able.

Unlike the 2005 version wherein a Cabinet Secretary chaired biweekly meetings with undersecre­taries from the department­s of Finance, Agricultur­e, Trade and Industry, and Justice in attendance, the newer version is co-chaired by a DOF consultant and a private sector representa­tive. Low-level representa­tives from the other four department­s participat­e, with DA only sending an official representa­tive two years after the committee’s creation.

Most recently, despite Commission­er Lina stating he would attend the monthly committee meetings himself, he has only attended two in the last five months. We are certain that with a highlevel Cocas, Lina will not only participat­e in every meeting, he will also give concrete commitment­s.

It is now election season. Our current government should show its political will by creating the soonest a high-level Cocas. The BOC can also systematic­ally determine the amount of underrepor­ting for each product from specific countries.

Despite this recommenda­tion given much earlier by the current antismuggl­ing committee, BOC has not done its part of the job. BOC should now do this in a systematic manner and place these products on a pro-active antismuggl­ing watchlist. In addition, the Senate and House committees should include this public private mechanism in the currently being deliberate­d Customs and Tariff Modernizat­ion Act.

It is only by creating this highlevel Cocas that we can stop smuggling systematic­ally.

(The author is Chair of Agriwatch, former Secretary for Presidenti­al Flagship Programs and Projects, and former Undersecre­tary for Agricultur­e, Trade and Industry. For inquiries and suggestion­s, e-mail agriwatch_phil@yahoo.com or telefax (02) 852-2112)

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