The Philippine Star

What’s in your first 2018 paycheck

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A few days after President Duterte signed the first tax reform package into law, the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) issued Revenue Memorandum Circular (RMC) No. 105-2017 to prescribe the withholdin­g tax rates on compensati­on that shall apply beginning Jan. 1.

To supplement the above issuance, the BIR also issued RMC No. 1-2018 to provide guidelines and illustrati­ve examples on how to compute payroll taxes using the new withholdin­g tax rates. Since personal exemptions were repealed under the TRAIN, taxpayers were presented with a uniform and simplified withholdin­g tax table. As prescribed in the circular, the total amount of monetary and non-monetary compensati­on paid to employees after segregatin­g the non-taxable benefits and mandatory contributi­ons shall be considered as taxable compensati­on. The applicable rates on the revised withholdin­g tax table shall be applied depending on the compensati­on range, after which the predetermi­ned taxes shall be added.

As the issued circular provides limited guidance on the determinat­ion of what constitute­s the monetary and non-monetary compensati­on in computing for taxable compensati­on, guidance must be sought from existing regulation­s which the BIR also confirmed during the public consultati­ons it held for income tax on Jan. 11.

The existing rules for determinin­g what constitute­s taxable compensati­on can be found in Revenue Regulation­s (RR) No. 2-98. The definition­s contained therein are essentiall­y the same as those in the draft Implementi­ng Rules and Regulation­s for Republic Act 10963. It defines the term “compensati­on” as all remunerati­on for services performed by an employee for his employer under an employer-employee relationsh­ip, unless specifical­ly excluded by the Code. The RR further defines regular compensati­on as including basic salary, fixed allowances for representa­tion, transporta­tion and other allowances paid to an employee per payroll period, while supplement­ary compensati­on includes payments to an employee in addition to the regular compensati­on such commission, overtime pay, taxable retirement pay, taxable bonus and other taxable benefits, with or without regard to a payroll period.

To further understand all of the changes, here are sample calculatio­ns of how the new withholdin­g tax rates shall be applied. Let’s take a look at what a low, middle and highlevel income earner will receive in their paychecks for the first payroll run of the year:

Based on the illustrati­on, we can draw the following observatio­ns:

• An employee who has a monthly income of P20,000 that is net of statutory contributi­ons and other nontaxable benefits and previously taxed at the effective rate of 15 percent (P3,000), will now enjoy tax exemption.

• An employee with a monthly income of P200,000 will also benefit from the TRAIN law with tax savings of approximat­ely four percent of his compensati­on.

In contrast, an employee who’s monthly income is at P2,000,000 will get an additional tax burden of approximat­ely one percent of his compensati­on.

As the BIR is now looking towards completing the IRR of the TRAIN Law through the recently concluded public consultati­ons, it is expected that more comprehens­ive guidelines on how to embrace the changes in tax regulation­s will be made available to all stakeholde­rs soon. It is important that we are all abreast with recent developmen­ts as we get on the TRAIN and go full steam ahead with its implementa­tion.

Geraldine P. Gorre is a supervisor from the tax group of KPMG R.G. Manabat & Co. (KPMG RGM&Co.), the Philippine member firm of KPMG Internatio­nal. KPMG RGM&Co. has been recognized as a Tier 1 tax practice, Tier 1 transfer pricing practice, Tier 1 leading tax transactio­nal firm and the 2016 National Transfer Pricing Firm of the Year in the Philippine­s by the Internatio­nal Tax Review.

This article is for general informatio­n purposes only and should not be considered as profession­al advice to a specific issue or entity.

The views and opinions expressed herein are those of the author and do not necessaril­y represent the views and opinions of KPMG Internatio­nal or KPMG RGM&Co. For comments or inquiries, please email ph-inquiry@kpmg.com or rgmanabat@kpmg.com.

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GERALDINE P. GORRE

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