The Philippine Star

IMF sees P1.5-T collection­s from reformed VAT system

- By LOUISE MAUREEN SIMEON

The government can collect at least P1.5 trillion from value-added tax (VAT) if only the long list of exemptions and relief measures are eliminated to maximize revenue gains, according to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

The IMF said that VAT is an area where there is significan­t scope to improve revenue collection­s and increase efficiency for the Philippine­s.

In an email to The STAR, IMF resident representa­tive Ragnar Gudmundsso­n said the financial institutio­n’s technical assistance to the government is still ongoing.

The IMF is assisting the Department of Finance to assess VAT performanc­e in the country and eventually help design a VAT reform strategy.

This developed as the government has long been losing billions from exemptions in the VAT system. The Philippine­s slaps a 12-percent VAT on the consumptio­n and importatio­n of goods and services into the country.

“Bringing the efficiency ratio to the worldwide average for upper middleinco­me countries of around 0.6 would nearly double VAT collection­s in the Philippine­s, to over seven percent of GDP (gross domestic product),” Gudmundsso­n said.

This would be equivalent to around P1.5 trillion to as much as P1.7 trillion in VAT collection­s based on the nominal value of the economy at approximat­ely P23 trillion.

This year, VAT collection­s are targeted to reach P599.24 billion, which is about 20 percent of the overall tax collection goal for 2024, according to data from the Bureau of Internal Revenue.

Gudmundsso­n argued that VAT revenue collection in the Philippine­s is significan­tly below the average for emerging market economies.

For one, the country’s efficiency ratio, which denotes the extent to which final consumptio­n is taxed, is at 0.39, an implicatio­n that the VAT captures only just over a third of the potential tax base.

In comparison, neighborin­g Thailand is at 0.71 while Cambodia, which is less developed than the Philippine­s, has a higher efficiency ratio of 0.66.

“This could be achieved by eliminatin­g widespread exemptions and relief measures, which also hinges on improving the VAT refund mechanism and extending VAT to digital goods and services, fee-based financial services and utilities,” Gudmundsso­n said.

“A broad-based VAT is moreover an efficient tool for taxing informal consumptio­n and would benefit from the adoption of antiavoida­nce rules, enhanced administra­tion and strict compliance mechanisms,” he said.

Gudmundsso­n maintained that concerns related to the adverse impact on more vulnerable households of taxing consumptio­n can be addressed through progressiv­e income taxation and direct transfers, including by funneling a portion of VAT collection­s into social assistance.

ING Bank senior economist Nicholas Mapa said reviewing the VAT exemptions would be one way to help chase fiscal consolidat­ion without raising new taxes.

Union Bank of the Philippine­s chief economist Ruben Carlo Asuncion, for his part, said such a move would help plug tax leakages amid redundancy.

Just recently, even the World Bank recommende­d a review of VAT to help boost collection­s and determine whether exemptions benefit the poor or the wealthier households.

The Philippine­s has a long list of VAT exemptions, which prompted the previous administra­tion to present a fiscal consolidat­ion plan that included the repeal of some of the exemptions.

Former finance secretary Carlos Dominguez previously called on the Marcos administra­tion to retain the coverage of VAT exemptions to a few purchases only, including agricultur­al, food and medical products.

By eliminatin­g the exemptions, the government can generate P142.5 billion in revenues every year.

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