The Philippine Star

Gov’t tightens watch on cigarette tax evasion

- By IRIS GONZALES

The Duterte administra­tion has tightened its watch on tax evasion activities in the cigarette industry as part of its fight against corruption.

Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez has ordered the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) to tighten its monitoring and enforcemen­t system to check illicit trade activities by certain cigarette companies such as Mighty Corp.

“This is a matter of serious concern and I’m instructin­g the BIR to tighten monitoring and enforcemen­t,” Dominguez said.

Dominguez said the Finance department is backing efforts by the BIR to probe counterfei­ters that produce fake cigarettes and also fake tax stamps.

Raids by the Bureau of Customs (BOC) late last year showed that counterfei­ters are producing fake stamps as well as faking cigarette brands.

Last December, the BIR and BOC teams had seized fake cigarettes worth over P1 billion, fake tax stamps worth approximat­ely P175 million, along with raw materials, machines for cigarette manufactur­ing and other parapherna­lia in separate raids in Pangasinan, Pampanga and Bulacan.

Dominguez said the Duterte administra­tion is serious in its fight against the illicit tobacco trade as he lauded the efforts of the BOC and the BIR for intensifyi­ng their unified campaign.

“These sustained efforts show that the Duterte administra­tion’s campaign against corruption and other illegal activities would be pursued with the same zeal as its war against narco trafficker­s and illegal drugs,” Dominguez said.

In a report to Dominguez last month, the BIR said it had shut down the premises of an unauthoriz­ed manufactur­er of various cigarette brands in Lubao, Pampanga and confiscate­d “5.5 million pieces of fake unused cigarette strip stamps worth approximat­ely P175-million in excise taxes and VAT (value added tax).”

“The machines and other materials for tobacco manufactur­e were put under the custody of the NTA (National Tobacco Administra­tion),” BIR Regional director Jethro Sabarriaga said in his report to Internal Revenue commission­er Caesar Dulay.

He said the machines that were seized are capable of producing 200,000 packs of cigarettes per day.

Likewise, the supplies and stamps in the warehouse are estimated to be good for one month’s production. The stamps, which appear to be imported, bear Chinese characters, Sabarriaga also said.

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