Business World

House committee approves tax measures on passive income

- Tadalan Charmaine A.

THE HOUSE WAYS and Means Committee on Wednesday approved the bill simplifyin­g the tax regime for financial investors, which forms part of the government’s comprehens­ive tax reform program (CTRP).

After a fourth deliberati­on, the unnumbered Substitute Bill, which proposes to be the ”Passive Income and Financial Intermedia­ry Taxation Act of 2019,” which proposed to a flat rate of 15% on dividend income, among others, cleared the panel in less than 10 minutes.

Committee chair Estrellita B. Suansing of the 1st district of Nueva Ecija said she targets plenary approval of the bill ahead of the congressio­nal break on Dec. 14.

“I am suggesting a plenary next week, so we can finish before the Christmas break,” Ms. Suansing told reporters in a chance interview after the meeting.

The committee also approved a measure increasing the excise tax on alcohol products while the chamber approved on third reading the Tax Amnesty Bill.

The final version of the substitute bill removed the 1,000-member requiremen­t for collective investment schemes (CIS), which are entitled to tax exemptions in the measure.

“There was an agreement to keep the 1,000 participan­t requiremen­t for a collective investment scheme to be exempted. We proposed to altogether remove that requiremen­t which may be difficult to achieve,” Finance Undersecre­tary Karl Kendrick T. Chua said.

The bill defined a CIS as “an arrangemen­t whereby funds are solicited from the investing public and pooled together for the purpose of investing, re-investing, and/or trading in securities or other assets.”

The measure previously provided an exemption for a CIS from the 5% gross receipts tax, other percentage taxes and value-added tax imposed under the National Internal Revenue Code, only if it gathers at least 1,000 members.

The DoF also proposed to reinstate the documentar­y stamp tax on certificat­es, which the committee deleted during the technical working group meeting.

“This includes all types of certificat­es and it is a major revenue source, as a way to offset the first proposed removal of the 1,000 exemption, we proposed to reinstate but instead of P50 we can lower to P40 per certificat­e,” Mr. Chua said.

The present system imposes a P30 documentar­y stamp tax on certificat­es, which include certificat­es or documents issued by customs officers, marine surveyors, and notaries.

Among the key provisions of the measure is a flat rate of 15% on interest on certain passive income as well as on cash and/or property dividends of individual­s, who are currently levied 20% and 10%, respective­ly.

The same 15% rate will also be levied on interest on certain passive income of domestic corporatio­ns, down from the current 20%.

A 15% rate will also be imposed on the net capital gains for the taxable year on the sale of stock not traded on the Stock Exchange or any registered and licensed organized market. The rate covers both individual­s and domestic corporatio­ns.

The Code currently imposes a 10% rate on net capital gains of more than P100,000 and 5% on gains less than P100,000. —

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