The Philippine Star

Phl budget surplus balloons in April

- By LAwrEncE AgcAoiLi

The Philippine­s posted a budget surplus for the second straight month in April, ballooning to P66.8 billion or 13.5 times the surplus recorded in the same period last year, as the accelerati­on in revenue collection outstrippe­d the growth in government expenditur­es, according to the Bureau of the Treasury (BTr).

Last month’s surplus helped pull down the deficit for the the first four months of the year, narrowing by 34.6 percent to P204.1 billion from P311.9 billion in the same period last year.

Based on BTr data, actual government revenue collection­s went up by 26.7 percent to P440.7 billion in April from P347.9 billion a year ago.

The tax take of the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) jumped by 40.2 percent to P336 billion from P239.6 billion amid the implementa­tion of Revenue Memorandum Circular 5-2023 in line with Section 37 of Republic Act 10963 or the Tax Reform for Accelerati­on and Inclusion Act. The TRAIN law requires the filing of quarterly value-added tax returns within 25 days following the close of each taxable quarter wherein the transactio­n was recorded.

Revenues from the Bureau of Customs inched up by 2.9 percent to P67.6 billion in April from P65.7 billion a year ago.

Non-tax revenues slipped by nine percent to P37.09 billion in April from P40.75 billion last year as the income of the BTr fell by 28.9 percent to P18.3 billion due to the base effect of early remittance­s of dividends from government-owned and controlled corporatio­ns last year.

On the other hand, government spending inched up by nine percent to P373.9 billion from last year’s P343 billion due mainly to the subsidy release to the Philippine Health Insurance Corp., larger capital expenditur­es of the Department of Public Works and Highways and Department of Transporta­tion, as well as higher interest payments for the month.

From January to April, government revenues increased by 11.2 percent to P1.26 trillion from P1.13 trillion, while spending inched up by 1.3 percent to P1.46 trillion from P1.44 trillion.

The BTr said the spending growth was tempered by the decline in transfers to local government units due to lower national tax allotment shares.

“Although in surplus, April’s budget balance is concerning on the expenditur­e side. Lower than expected expenditur­es will impact the country’s growth potential,” China Bank chief economist Domini Velasquez said.

Velasquez warned that revenues could also fall short in the coming months as the government would no longer enjoy last year’s high oil import price windfall.

Velasquez added that a slower gross domestic product (GDP) growth this year could also lead to lower income tax collection­s.

With the expected external headwinds, the Cabinet-level Developmen­t Budget Coordinapa­rtly tion Committee has set a slower GDP growth target of six to seven percent this year after its accelerati­on to 7.6 percent last year from 5.7 percent in 2021.

Velasquez noted that the proposed tax reforms such as the Passive Income and Financial Intermedia­ry Taxation Act as well as VAT on digital services are expected to be implemente­d only in 2024.

“Moving forward, to remain prudent, we still think the government should fast-track revenue collection measures to keep the budget deficit in check and ease pressure to incur more debt especially now with current interest rates still elevated,” Velasquez said.

Michael Ricafort, chief economist at Rizal Commercial Banking Corp., said discipline­d government spending helped narrow the budget deficit in recent months,

through no more COVID lockdowns prospectiv­ely as a matter of policy priority as well as recent signals to rein in unnecessar­y government expenditur­es to help narrow the budget deficit and temper the increment on the outstandin­g national government debt.

“For the coming months, there is still a chance for a narrower budget deficit after the tax collection season in April 2023 amid further reopening of the economy toward greater normalcy, with no more restrictio­ns recently and as a policy priority, going forward, thereby leading to increased sales, profits, employment, livelihood and other economic activities that fundamenta­lly increased the government’s tax revenue collection­s,” Ricafort said.

He said still relatively high inflation could increase state expenditur­es. Higher interest rates could also add to the government’s borrowing costs and overall debt servicing bill, which could lead to wider budget deficits, unless offset by improvemen­ts in tax revenue collection­s.

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