Sun.Star Cebu

LOCAL ROAD CHARGE AMONG OPTIONS IN ‘FISCAL FEDERALISM’

- /IDA

Merely allowing regions to hold on to their income “may not be enough to undo the huge imbalance in economic and human developmen­t” across regions, a paper points out. In a federal setup expenditur­es and taxation powers will have to be assigned clearly to correct “a highly uneven level of economic developmen­t” in the country

There is no single model the Philippine­s can follow to ensure that taxes and expenditur­es are effectivel­y designed under a federal government, a study recently pointed out.

One of the biggest challenges then, as officials pursue the shift to a federal government, is to ensure that regional government­s have “the right Aincentive­s to deliver services assigned to them efficientl­y and effectivel­y and to be more accountabl­e to their constituen­ts.”

Researcher Rosario G. Manasan examined what options are available in a discussion paper circulated last December by the Philippine Institute for Developmen­t Studies (PIDS). It’s titled “Designing the Fiscal Features of a Federal Form of Government: Autonomy, Accountabi­lity, and Equity Considerat­ions.”

A “highly uneven level of economic developmen­t” across the regions has resulted from Metro Manila getting, for many years now, “a disproport­ionately large” share of the national budget. That’s one of the reasons proponents often cite in pushing for the federal system.

Uneven division

In 2016, Manasan pointed out, the National Capital Region received 14 percent of appropriat­ions in the national budget, compared with 21 percent for all seven regions in the rest of Luzon, 10 percent for three regions in the Visayas, and 13 percent for Mindanao’s six regions.

But merely allowing regions to hold on to their income “may not be enough to undo the huge imbalance in economic and human developmen­t” across regions, considerin­g that their tax bases vary. Cities tend to have a richer tax base than towns and provinces, being more urban and “having economies that are more market-based.”

A committee led by former Su- preme Court chief justice Reynato Puno has started to review the 1987 Constituti­on and is expected to submit their recommenda­tions to President Rodrigo Duterte.

One of the challenges in a federal setup will be assigning expenditur­es effectivel­y, so that problems felt in the last 25 years under the Local Government Code are addressed. This will initially mean giving regional government­s a bigger share of revenue than the present Internal Revenue Allotments (IRA).

New revenue sources

“Unless new sources of revenue are assigned to regional government­s and local government­s under the proposed federal models, intergover­nmental transfers to subnationa­l government­s inclusive of their revenue share in federal revenues will have to expand to 59 percent of total collection­s from national internal revenue taxes in the current year, from 22 percent at present,” Manasan explained.

She pointed out in her paper that after the Local Government Code of 1991 took effect, local government­s continued to lack revenue autonomy because of a combinatio­n of limited local taxing authority, limited revenue productivi­ty, and “less than optimal” use of local taxing powers by local officials.

Some local government­s, in search of more revenues, “have decided to raise permit fees and licenses that are at times deemed to be excessive by the business sector and to impose taxes on bases that are otherwise reserved for the central government,” Manasan pointed out.

“This practice has led to numerous disagreeme­nts between local government­s and the business sector that have oftentimes ended in court and added to the cost of doing business and introduced greater uncertaint­y in the local business environmen­t.”

One option that may be considered is transferri­ng from the national to the regional government­s the collection of the motor vehicle user charge and drivers’ license fees, estimated at P13 billion in 2016 prices, Manasan wrote.

Who does what?

Another levy that regional government­s may be authorized to collect is a residence-based surtax on personal income tax. At one percent of taxable personal income of residents, this would yield some P19 billion a year in 2016 prices, Manasan estimated.

In the federal model proposed by the PDP-Laban Federalism Institute, 11 regional government­s are supposed to take charge of local government supervisio­n, fire protection, early childhood education, water supply, sanitation, waste management, road traffic management, parks, and social welfare.

Regional government­s will share with the federal government its powers over health, housing, police, regional planning, environmen­tal management, tourism, road infrastruc­ture, flood control, transporta­tion and communicat­ion, among others.

Another area that needs to be weighed carefully is borrowing by regional government­s, such as to finance local infrastruc­ture projects. Guidance from the literature on fiscal federalism, Manasan said, suggests that regional government­s should be given more independen­t taxing authority.

At the same time, however, the federal government must commit “not to bail out fiscally distressed subnationa­l government­s and not to guarantee subnationa­l government borrowing,” as this toughness would help teach all levels of government to practice fiscal discipline.

On this score, different federal constituti­ons offer various models. Mexico does not allow states to borrow from foreign sources or in foreign currency. Malaysia limits states to borrowing only from the federal government or from a source approved by it.

 ?? SUNSTAR FOTO / ALLAN CUIZON ?? CHARGES. One challenge will be for regional government­s to generate revenues without harming local business.
SUNSTAR FOTO / ALLAN CUIZON CHARGES. One challenge will be for regional government­s to generate revenues without harming local business.

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