The Philippine Star

TRAIN boosts tax take by P12.5 B in Q1

- By MARY GRACE PADIN

The implementa­tion of the Tax Reform for Accelerati­on and Inclusion (TRAIN) Law helped the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) boost its collection­s by P12.5 billion in the first three months, the agency said yesterday.

According to data presented by the BIR during a hearing at the House of Representa­tives, collection­s due to the TRAIN Law recorded a net gain of P12.5 billion in the first quarter.

This was a reversal from the P3.2 billion net loss programmed by the government during the first quarter of implementi­ng the law.

Broken down, revenue losses from personal income tax collection­s reached only P23.34 billion in the first quarter, lower than the expected revenue loss of P36.04 billion.

“We can only surmise that some of this or the balance can be attributab­le to our field performanc­e, especially the enforcemen­t processes in our revenue regions,” BIR assistant commission­er Alfredo Misajon said during the hearing of the Congressio­nal Oversight Committee on the Comprehens­ive Tax Reform Program.

There was also a P3 billion decrease in the value-added tax (VAT) collection­s from January to March, in contrast with the expected gain of P4.21 billion.

Gains from petroleum excise tax amounted to P4.73 billion, lower than the P9.99 billion goal; while automobile excise tax climbed by P363.71 million, also lower than expected.

On the other hand, the increase in the excise tax on tobacco due to TRAIN during the period was significan­tly higher than expected at P14.97 billion, as compared to the P686 million goal.

Misajon said this is due to unchanged consumptio­n behavior of smokers, and frontloadi­ng on the part of the manufactur­ers in anticipati­on for higher excise taxes.

Excise tax collection on sugarsweet­ened beverages was mostly on target with P7.7 billion actual collection as compared to the P7.78 billion goal.

The TRAIN Law, as contained in Republic Act 10963, aims to simplify the country’s tax system by lowering personal income tax rates.

It also seeks to adjust excise taxes of fuel, automobile, coal and sugar-sweetened beverages, and expand the tax base by removing value-added tax exemptions.

BIR collection­s amounted to P423.08 billion in the first quarter, 14.16 percent higher than the 370.61 billion recorded in the same period in 2017.

This was also 16.95 percent higher than the P361.77 billion target for the period.

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