Business World

Assessing TRAIN

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The first package of the comprehens­ive tax reform, also known as TRAIN (Tax Reform for Accelerati­on and Inclusion), was the most significan­t yet very controvers­ial piece of legislatio­n in 2017.

Those who oppose TRAIN label it as pro-rich and anti-poor. Thus is the position of diverse Left- oriented groups like the Ibon Foundation, Bayan, and Freedom from Debt Coalition. And it is the same view articulate­d by liberals like Florin Hilbay. What is evident though is that those who are fully opposed to the Rodrigo Duterte administra­tion do not spare TRAIN from harsh criticism either.

But as Vice-President Leni Robredo once said in an interview with Rogue ( Special Collectors’ Issue, July 2017), the proper opposition is “one that doesn’t oppose for the sake of opposing.” Incidental­ly, the Vice-President is supportive of the Department of Finance’s version of TRAIN, which she says, “even if it isn’t perfect, it’s for the greater good.”

Thus, we ask: Is Ibon Foundation’s or Hilbay’s assertion that TRAIN is anti- poor an apt descriptio­n?

Like the Vice- President, we at Action for Economic Reforms ( AER) have taken a more nuanced position on TRAIN. That is to say, we see its imperfecti­on but we likewise recognize the gains from it.

Even those strongly opposing Duterte should be thankful for TRAIN’s passage.

To say that it is anti-poor and pro-rich is an over-simplifica­tion. Those who dismiss TRAIN as such, without a deeper explanatio­n and a reasonable justificat­ion, are ideologica­lly driven, are opposing for the sake of opposing, are misinforme­d, or are not equipped with the analytical tools to dissect TRAIN.

Here thus is an attempt to have a sober if not unprejudic­ed assessment of TRAIN.

The legislated TRAIN yields significan­t revenue, amounting to an additional P90 billion in the first year. This is nothing to sneeze at, considerin­g that the first package of TRAIN includes income tax relief, which will result in revenue loss. TRAIN will provide sustainabl­e revenues to finance AmBisyon 2040, whose goals are to make the Philippine­s a high middle- income country, eradicate poverty, and create a stable middle class, in a period of one generation.

Furthermor­e, the increase in tax effort arising from TRAIN strengthen­s the macroecono­mic fundamenta­ls, necessary for sustained growth and employment. In fact, Fitch Ratings, Inc., anticipate­d TRAIN’s passage and upgraded the country’s credit rating from BBB- to BBB (investment grade) in early December 2017. In this sense, by creating jobs through new and increased investment­s, TRAIN is helping the poor.

TRAIN also gives significan­t income tax relief to the working classes and the middle class as well as sections of the rich. However, the richest earning a monthly compensati­on of P666,667 and ( or P8 million and above annually) will have to pay a higher marginal tax rate of 35% ( compared to 32% before). To give an example, the overwhelmi­ng majority of those employed in the business process outsourcin­g ( BPO) industry — or those receiving a monthly salary of P20,833 and below — will no longer have to pay income tax.

But what about the poor? They have not been paying income taxes. Won’t they be hurt by TRAIN because of the increase in the excise taxes on consumptio­n, particular­ly fuel?

Let’s explain the fuel tax issue, and it can be a bit complicate­d. Fuel taxes have not been adjusted to inflation since 1997. Thus, in real terms, excise taxes from fuel have been declining. Worse, under the Gloria Arroyo administra­tion, the excise tax on diesel was even removed. It is but reasonable to keep the fuel tax rates in tune with inflation. This is no different from increasing wages and salaries to at least adjust to inflation or having income tax levels rebrackete­d and lowered to prevent inflation creep.

The fact is, fuel is mainly consumed by the well off, not the poor. Scrutinize the data from the Family Income and Expenditur­e Survey (FIES). The households that constitute the richest 10% of the population consume 3.7% of their consumptio­n spending for fuel. In contrast, the poor’s fuel consumptio­n is equivalent to 1.1% of their total household expenditur­e. The richest 10% accounts for 51% of total fuel consumptio­n. Some economists have thus argued that the fuel tax is “moderately progressiv­e.”

Yet, it cannot be denied that the consumptio­n taxes will increase prices, thus affecting the poor. The effective response is that government will provide unconditio­nal cash transfers to those households from the first to seventh deciles that will not gain from the income tax relief but will be affected by the consumptio­n taxes. The amount of transfer for the household beneficiar­y — P2,400 in the first year and P3,600 in the second and third years — more than offset the higher spending resulting from the higher consumptio­n taxes.

Further, the independen­t Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas and economists from various quarters project that the inflation

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