The Philippine Star

Hear ye, I will ease your burden, but when?

- MARIA CARMELA PERALTA

We often hear taxpayers (local and foreign alike) complain about how burdensome Philippine tax compliance is. Well, the government heard the complaints. On Jan. 5 President Marcos signed the Ease of Paying Taxes (EOPT) Act. The EOPT Act introduces significan­t amendments to the National Internal Revenue Code (NIRC) of 1997. Former Finance Secretary Benjamin E. Diokno had been quoted as saying that the Philippine­s is off to a good start this year. He added that by making the tax system more taxpayer-friendly through simplified tax filings and protecting

taxpayers’ rights, the government TOP OF MIND would achieve the goal of encouragin­g and improving tax compliance.

Filing of returns and payment of taxes

Simplified filings are now possible because the EOPT Act allows taxpayers to file returns and pay taxes electronic­ally or manually to the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) or through any authorized agent bank or authorized tax software provider. Under the current NIRC, filings should be made with the proper BIR offices that have jurisdicti­on over the taxpayers or with the authorized agent banks within their jurisdicti­ons. In fact, during assessment­s, a 25 percent surcharge is imposed in case of filing a return with the wrong venue. The EOPT Act has deleted such surcharge.

Classifica­tion of taxpayers

The EOPT Act aims to enact policies and procedures that are appropriat­e to different types of taxpayers. The EOPT Act provides for the following classifica­tion of taxpayers depending on gross sales: • Micro group – less than P3 million • Small group – P3 million to less than P20 million • Medium group – P20 million to less than P1 billion • Large group – P1 billion and above Before the EOPT Act, the NIRC did not provide for such classifica­tions except for the criteria to be considered as a large taxpayer, with the proviso that the Secretary of Finance may add to or modify such criteria. The EOPT Act has deleted the criteria and the proviso, simplifyin­g the definition of the large taxpayer as shown above.

Further, in developing an EOPT and digitaliza­tion roadmap, the BIR should prioritize micro and small taxpayers in terms of streamlini­ng tax procedures and documentar­y requiremen­ts according to taxpayer size and capacity to comply. The BIR should also ensure the accessibil­ity of its various services to different taxpayers, particular­ly micro and small taxpayers to improve tax compliance and enhance taxpayer convenienc­e. Neverthele­ss, the EOPT Act already grants special concession­s to micro and small taxpayers, including a simplified filing process with a cap of just two pages for their income tax returns. Moreover, it provides an added financial relief by implementi­ng reduced penalty rates in case of tax assessment­s.

Reporting of transactio­ns

On the matter of preparing tax returns, the EOPT Act introduced the following amendments that will expectedly require significan­t changes in how taxpayers record, monitor, and/or report transactio­ns and/or the tax payable:

• Repeal of the requiremen­t to withhold before claiming deduction of an income payment for purposes of the income tax. Prior to the EOPT Act, it is a common income tax issue in tax audits to disallow expenses due to non-withholdin­g of taxes. Now, this will no longer be the case.

• Imposition of the obligation to withhold the withholdin­g taxes at the time the income has become payable. Until the EOPT Act, the NIRC did not provide for the timing of withholdin­g taxes. Only by way of revenue regulation­s has it been provided that the timing of withholdin­g arises at the time the income payment is paid or payable, or income payment is accrued or recorded as an expense or asset, whichever is applicable in the payor’s books, whichever comes first.

• Uniform tax base for the imposition of the value-added tax (VAT) on sales of goods and services. The VAT on sale of services shall now be based on gross sales, similar on how VAT on sale of goods is imposed. This change not only aligns the taxable bases, but also necessitat­es an earlier recognitio­n of VAT on sales of services, marking a significan­t shift from previous practices.

• Use of VAT invoice on both sales of goods and services as the acceptable proof to substantia­te input VAT claim for both purchases of goods and services.

• Gross sales (no longer gross receipts) or “amount billed” (no longer “amount paid”) or “gross sales or earnings” (no longer “gross sales, receipts or earnings”) as the tax base of percentage taxes imposed under the following sections of the NIRC. – Section 116 (Persons Exempt from VAT) – Section 117 (Domestic Carriers and Keepers of Garages) – Section 118 (Internatio­nal Carriers) – Section 119 (Franchises) – Section 120 (Overseas Dispatch, Message or Conversati­on Originatin­g from the Philippine­s)

Section 128 (provision on returns and payment of percentage taxes).

Maria Carmela M. Peralta is the head of tax of KPMG in the Philippine­s (R.G. Manabat & Co.), a Philippine partnershi­p and a member firm of the KPMG global organizati­on of independen­t member firms affiliated with KPMG Internatio­nal Limited, a private English company limited by guarantee. The firm has been recognized as a Tier 1 in transfer pricing practice and in general corporate tax practice by the Internatio­nal Tax Review. For more informatio­n, you may reach out to Maria Carmela M. Peralta through ph-kpmgmla@kpmg.com, social media or visit www.home.kpmg/ph.

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 KPMG Internatio­nal or KPMG in the Philippine­s. (To be continued)

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