The Freeman

DOF bares refined tax measure proposals

- (dof.gov.ph)

The Department of Finance (DOF) has presented its refined proposal on Package 4 of the Comprehens­ive Tax Reform Program (CTRP)—a measure recalibrat­ed by Finance Secretary Ralph Recto during his first week in office—to the Senate Committee on Ways and Means on February 12, 2024.

A priority measure of the Marcos, Jr. administra­tion, Package 4 seeks to encourage growth in key financial markets by simplifyin­g the tax structure on passive income, and on certain instrument­s and other financial products.

It was approved on the third and final reading by the House of Representa­tives on November 14, 2022 and is currently being taken up in the Senate Committee on Ways and Means.

Assistant Secretary Karlo S. Adriano of the DOF’s Fiscal Policy and Monitoring Group (FPMG) presented to the Senate the salient features of the refined proposal, which aims to maintain the structure of some products and instrument­s while deferring the implementa­tion of certain provisions by 2028 or when the government will have been in a better fiscal position.

Under Package 4, the interest income tax will be harmonized at 20%, while royalties will be maintained according to the existing tax code until 2027, subsequent­ly harmonized and decreased to 15% in 2028.

Similarly, the dividend income tax will remain unchanged until 2027, with a proposed harmonizat­ion of 10% in 2028.

On the other hand, the stock transactio­n tax will gradually be reduced annually by 0.1%, from 0.6 % to 0.1% in 2028.

Current taxes on financial transactio­ns, including sales, agreements to sell, memoranda of sales, deliveries, or transfer of shares or certificat­es of stocks, will be maintained until 2027 and subsequent­ly removed in 2028. The same timeline applies to taxes on all bills of exchange or drafts.

Tax rates on bank checks, drafts, certificat­es of deposit not bearing interest,

and other instrument­s will remain unchanged, while those of life insurance policies will also see no adjustment­s.

On the other hand, rates on policies of insurance upon property, fidelity bonds, and other insurance policies will gradually be decreased annually by 1%, from 12.5% to 7.5% in 2028.

Furthermor­e, taxes on Philippine Charity Sweepstake­s Office (PCSO) tickets, prizes, and other winnings will have no changes.

Lastly, taxes on mortgages, pledges, and deeds of trust will stay as is until 2027, after which they will be lowered to a 0.3% rate in 2028.

“The idea here is that [CTRP] was proposed during the pandemic when our debt to GDP ratio was approximat­ely at 40%. Basically, during that time, the government has some fiscal space to accommodat­e some of the losses, but given that we’re already beyond the COVID where our debt-toGDP ratio is around 60%, we have to be mindful of

the impact of having revenue-eroding measures,” Assistant Secretary Adriano said.

The proposed changes to taxes on passive income, financial intermedia­ries, financial transactio­ns, and excise tax on pick-up trucks are expected to yield P12.2 billion in revenues from the third quarter of 2024 to 2028, versus the PHP 83 billion foregone revenue from the original version of the bill and the PHP 19.3 billion revenue loss from the House version.

“This is where we will see the expertise of Secretary Ralph Recto in managing our fiscal outputs or fiscal performanc­e. To be honest, I’ve seen that in action here in the Senate,” said Senate Committee on Ways and Means Chairperso­n Sherwin T. Gatchalian.

“Just by shifting the implementa­tion backward or forward, you can actually achieve a revenue gain. [It may be] minimal, but at least, it’s not going to be detrimenta­l to our fiscal health. So, I can see that this is where his experience and knowledge in managing fiscal situations would come in,” he added.

Support from the private sector

Various financial groups expressed their support

for the passage of the refined Package 4 bill during the Senate hearing.

“We are one with the government in the harmonizat­ion of the passive income tax,” said Mr. Adrian S. Ching, President of the Money Market Associatio­n of the Philippine­s.

Mr. Steven C. Te, President of the Trust Officers Associatio­n of the Philippine­s (TOAP), said they welcome the proposal to reform taxes on passive income, further noting the bill’s objectives to simplify taxation and to harmonize the rates of interests, dividends, and other passive income.

The DOF is currently working on finalizing the exemptions, repeal list, and tax administra­tion of the proposed bill.

The Senate is set to form a technical working group (TWG) to discuss the proposed bill beginning next week.

Secretary Recto earlier stated that the DOF has no new tax proposals, but is recalibrat­ing its existing priority tax measures to guarantee that these are fairer, easier to collect, and more practical while ensuring that these reforms will not translate to unnecessar­y burden to Filipino consumers and taxpayers.

 ?? DOF.GOV.PH ?? The Finance Department has presented its tax measure proposals, which was recalibrat­ed by Finance Secretary Ralph Recto during his first week in office.
DOF.GOV.PH The Finance Department has presented its tax measure proposals, which was recalibrat­ed by Finance Secretary Ralph Recto during his first week in office.

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