Sun.Star Davao

RA 10963 amends Nat'l Internal Revenue Code of 1997

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TO ease the burden of common taxpayers and to provide additional resources for funding social and economic infrastruc­ture that will benefit the poor, President Rodrigo R. Duterte signed into law on December 19, 2017, Republic Act (RA) No. 10963. Also known as the “Tax Reform for Accelerati­on and Inclusion (Train),” the Act amends and repeals certain provisions of the previously amended RA No. 8424, otherwise known as the National Internal Revenue Code of 1997.

The Train Law is a consolidat­ion of House Bill No. 5636 and Senate Bill No. 1592 that were both passed by the House of Representa­tives and the Senate after the bicameral conference committee report was ratified on December 13, 2017. From the proposed bill, the following line items were vetoed by the President with the correspond­ing ratiocinat­ion of his veto:

1. Continued entitlemen­t of the 15% special tax rate of gross income for qualified employees of RHQs/ ROHQs, OBUs, or petroleum service contractor­s and subcontrac­tors. The said provision is violates the Equal Protection Clause and the rule of equity and uniformity. Given the significan­t reduction in personal income tax, the employees of the aforementi­oned firms should follow the regular tax rates as with other individual taxpayers.

2. Zero-rating of sales of goods and services to separate customs territory and tourism enterprise zones. This provision goes against the principle of limiting the VAT zerorating to direct exporters. Separate customs territorie­s create significan­t leakages in the previous tax system. On the other hand, the current law for tourism enterprise­s explicitly allows only duty- and tax-free importatio­n of capital equipment, transporta­tion equipment, and other goods.

3. Exemption from percentage tax of gross sales/receipts not exceeding Php 500,000. The suggested exemption from percentage tax will result in the unnecessar­y decrease of revenues and may lead to abuse and leakages. Since the affected taxpayers are already exempt from VAT, then the lower 3% percentage tax is considered reasonable.

4. Exemption of various petroleum products from excise tax when used as input, feedstock, or as raw material in the manufactur­ing of petrochemi­cal products, or in the refining of petroleum products, or as replacemen­t fuel for natural gas fired combined cycle power plants. Having the risk of being too general, this may lead to abuse by taxpayers and a significan­t decrease in revenue. The previous tax system already identifies which petroleum products can be exempted and will still be used in the newly signed Act.

5. Earmarking of incrementa­l tobacco taxes. The proposed provision amends the Sin Tax Law, which provides for guaranteed funds for universal health care. It will diminish the share of the health sector in the proposed allocation, thus, vetoed.

RA No. 10963 took effect on January 1, 2018. For more informatio­n, kindly refer to the full text of the said Act. Source: P&A Grant Thornton Certified Public Accountant­s

Punongbaya­n & Araullo (P&A) is the Philippine member firm of Grant Thornton Internatio­nal Ltd

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