The Philippine Star

Most of tax stamps features compromise­d, says DOF

- By MARY GRACE PADIN and IRIS GONZALES

Eight out of the 10 security features of the Bureau of Internal Revenue’s (BIR) tax stamps have been compromise­d by counterfei­ters, the Department of Finance (DOF) said.

Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III said there is a need to redesign the current tax stamps as most of the security features have been breached.

“We need to change it. Because apparently, of the 10 security features, the counterfei­ters have already been able to copy eight,” Dominguez said.

He said this move is currently one of the priorities of the DOF and BIR considerin­g the billions of leakages caused by the use of fake tax stamps.

Tax leakages caused by the proliferat­ion of fake tax stamps have reached P10 billion to P15 billion annually, according to the BIR estimates.

“This is like the peso, the BSP (Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas) checks regularly. There are many hooligans in this world. It’s big money,” Dominguez said.

However, the secretary recognized that overhaulin­g the features of the tax stamp would be expensive and increase the cost for the cigarette manufactur­ers.

“That’s why I said we have to have a chat with the cigarette companies... This time, we have to consult with them if they can afford it,” he said.

Meanwhile, the Metro Retail Stores Group Inc., the listed mall operator of the Gaisano Group, has reported to the BIR that the 82,902 cigarette packs bearing fake tax stamps recently found in its Super Store mall in Mandaue, Cebu were purchased directly from Mighty Corp., the Bulacan-based cigarette company owned and operated by businessme­n Ceasar and Alex Wongchukin­g.

The BIR is conducting an investigat­ion into the matter after its examiners in Cebu confiscate­d and seized 82,902 Mighty cigarettes with fake stamps during an inspection early this month.

Mighty spokespers­on Oscar Barrientos said they would await the results of the BIR’s ongoing investigat­ion.

“We will wait for the results of the investigat­ion. It is premature at this time to say the stamps are fake,” Barrientos told The STAR in an interview in Makati last week.

In a Feb. 15 letter to BIR Commission­er Ceasar Dulay, Metro Retail said the 82,902 packs of Mighty cigarettes that were found bearing fake stamps in its Mandaue mall were sourced from Mighty itself and not from any other supplier.

“We confirm that ( the) products of Mighty Corp. which were seized by your BIR examiners were purchased directly from Mighty Corp. with TIN-000-238-810 as borne by our records,” Metro Retail said in its letter to Dulay.

Other cigarette brands from other suppliers were also checked and the tax stamps were found to be genuine, Metro Retail added.

However, Barrientos declined to confirm if the cigarettes came from Mighty, noting that their company’s TIN is “well known.”

“The TIN is a public knowledge because it is indicated in the invoice or the ORs,” Barrientos said.

Earlier, Dulay told reporters the bureau would invite cigarette firms for a dialogue to address the proliferat­ion of fake tax stamps in the market.

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