The Philippine Star

Excise tax on single-use plastics to yield P34 B

- By LOUISE MAUREEN SIMEON

The move to slap excise taxes on singleuse plastics is seen generating P34 billion for the government and curbing the increasing mismanagem­ent that contribute­s to overall pollution.

As part of its refined priority tax measures, the Department of Finance (DOF) is pushing for the excise tax on single-use plastic bags to raise P33.86 billion in additional funds over the next five years.

Finance Undersecre­tary Karlo Adriano said the measure seeks to curb the high volume of mismanaged plastics and serve as the country’s contributi­on to the global movement of reducing pollution and adopting more sustainabl­e practices.

“When a good has some negative externalit­ies, meaning the consumptio­n or use of a product causes some social cost, we try to regulate that through taxation,” Adriano said.

“In the case of single-use plastic, the social cost is mismanaged waste, which is related to climate change,” he said.

The Finance department is proposing a weight-based rate for better tax administra­tion with a P100-per-kilogram excise tax on single-use plastic bags.

The proposal covers single-use plastic bags that are not recyclable such as “ice”, “labo” or ”sando” bags (with or without handles).

The Philippine­s has one of the cheapest tax rates per bag of single-use plastics at P0.40.

With the excise tax, this would increase to P0.82 per piece for ‘labo’ bags and up to P0.91 for ‘sando’ bags.

A four percent annual indexation beginning the third year of implementa­tion is also part of the proposal.

The DOF proposal is similar to pending bills at the House of Representa­tives and the Senate, which was sponsored by Sen. Joel Villanueva.

Sen. Raffy Tulfo has also filed a related measure but his proposal only imposes P20 per kilo on single-use plastics, resulting in just P8.64 billion in extra revenues for the government.

The excise tax also aims to cut down on plastic consumptio­n.

The DOF estimates that the levy would result in as much as 26 percent reduction in volume.

According to the World Bank, the Philippine­s is the third largest contributo­r of mismanaged plastic entering the ocean each year with 750,000 metric tons.

It noted that the country’s vulnerabil­ity to climate change puts it at risk of losing 13.6 percent of its economic output by 2040 if not addressed.

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