Business World

Cooperativ­es in taxmen’s sights

- Laforga B. M.

THE GOVERNMENT has now turned its sights on nearly 30,000 registered cooperativ­es as it moves to plug tax leaks, the Finance department (DoF) said in a press release on Monday.

According to the news statement, Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III ordered the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) to step up its audit of these organizati­ons “to weed out those that have abused the tax incentives granted to them under the law,” after BIR Deputy Commission­er Arnel SD. Guballa reported in a recent DoF Executive Committee meeting that the bureau has on record 29,623 registered cooperativ­es that paid a total of P2.84 billion in taxes last year, 5.4% less than the P3 billion they paid in 2017.

The BIR said it has sent audit notices to 474 cooperativ­es, so far, resulting in tax assessment­s amounting to P1.62 billion. The bureau has so far collected P250.35 million of that amount.

Mr. Dominguez told BIR brass in the same meeting led by Commission­er Caesar R. Dulay to check if these groups “are true to their mandate of promoting self-reliance and social change, and which ones have apparently organized themselves into cooperativ­es as a ruse to exploit the tax benefits granted to such organizati­ons.”

During the ongoing audit, BIR “uncovered enterprise­s with business models that are not cooperativ­es but claim to be one so that they can enjoy the tax perks,” Mr. Guballa said in that meeting, citing the example of one group that posed as a cooperativ­e but owned “several gasoline filling stations.”

Republic Act No. 10963, or the Tax Reform for Accelerati­on and Inclusion Act (TRAIN) that came into effect on Jan. 1 last year, required cooperativ­es to submit regularly to the Cooperativ­e Developmen­t Authority (CDA) reports on tax breaks they enjoy — including from income tax and value added tax — under RA 6938, or the Cooperativ­e Code of the Philippine­s.

The CDA then submits a consolidat­ed report to the BIR which the DoF will include in its database under RA 10708, or the Tax Incentives Management and Transparen­cy Act.

BIR-CDA Joint Administra­tive Order (JAO) No. 1-2019, which Mr. Dominguez signed on May 16, set rules to implement the new TRAIN requiremen­ts.

The JAO requires all registered cooperativ­es to file tax returns

and pay any tax liabilitie­s using the BIR’s electronic system for filing and payments.

These groups that were issued certificat­es of tax exemption (CTE) and which then availed of such perks are now required to submit their annual tax incentives reports to the CDA by April 30 of the succeeding year, or 15 days from the deadline of filing annual income tax returns, depending on accounting period used.

The JAO provides that any cooperativ­e that fails to comply with these reportoria­l requiremen­ts will have its CTE revoked.

The BIR will draw up a list of those that did not comply with such requiremen­ts from the master list to be provided by the CDA.

The first offense will result in CTE revocation and prohibitio­n from availing of tax perks for a year from date of revocation. The second offense will result in prohibitio­n from availing of tax exemptions for three years, while a third offense bars the violator from perks for five years. A fourth offense bars the erring cooperativ­e from fiscal incentives permanentl­y. —

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