Business World

BPO industry may miss job creation goal by 40% if incentives removed

- By Janina C. Lim Reporter

THE informatio­n technology and business process outsourcin­g (IT-BPO) industry said it may fall 40% short of its 2018 job creation target in a high-tax regime.

“There’s a balancing act between job generation and tax revenue creation. There’s an inflection point. You make us more expensive than we are, then our ability to be effective in generating jobs will also be affected,” Informatio­n Technology and Business Process Associatio­n of the Philippine­s (IBPAP) President and CEO Rey C. Untal said in an interview on Thursday at the group’s headquarte­rs in Taguig City.

He noted the potential of the latest round of tax reform legislatio­n, known as the TRABAHO bill, to make future BPO projects competitiv­e. However, Mr. Untal said it may have negative effects on existing firms. He cited the impending transition to a corporate income tax (CIT).

“The jump from the 5% GIE (gross income earned) to a 28% CIT, will increase your tax by as much as threefold. That impacts your cost structure. The only way that you can recover that cost structure is to pass it on to your customers. But if you pass on the cost to your customers then your perceived value versus cost becomes higher also. So that’s what we are avoiding,” Mr. Untal said.

“...If we move to a regime where our cost model will increase substantia­lly, then our ability to create jobs will be impacted by 40%,” he added, noting the estimates were produced by a study of the impact of taxes on the BPO industry’s ability to generate employment.

Under its five-year road map, the group aims to create 1.8 million jobs by 2022, against 1.15 million jobs in 2016.

“So instead of growing 100,000 a year, we could grow by 60,000. We could grow by 50,000. I don’t know,” Mr. Untal said.

In terms of online hiring activity, the Monster.com employment index indicates that the IT-BPO sector declined 4% in the second quarter. In June, hiring activity by the sector declined 7%.

“This conversati­on around the TRABAHO bill and about the bigger context of the BPO industry needs to be put together. This industry’s one critical attribute is the ability to generate jobs,” he added.

Mr. Untal said the industry now employs, directly and indirectly, close to five million Filipinos, which is expected to expand to 7.6 million by 2022.

“This industry is also one of the largest creators of the new middle class,” Mr. Untal said.

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