Business World

CITIRA passage seen helping stem exit of multinatio­nal firms

- Genshen L. Espedido

THE PASSAGE of a corporate tax reform bill is expected to remove investor uncertaint­y which could help counteract the effects of a recent spate of closures among multinatio­nal firms operating in the Philippine­s, a senior legislator said.

Representa­tive Jose Maria Clemente S. Salceda of Albay, who also chairs the House ways and means committee, said the recent closures highlight the urgency of passing the proposed Corporate Income Tax and Incentives Reform Act (CITIRA) “to end the wait-and-see mode of companies” and turn their investment pledges into actual investment­s which will create jobs to “offset losses from recently-announced closures.”

CITIRA, which will gradually bring down corporate tax rates while rationaliz­ing incentives, is awaiting Senate approval after having been passed by the House in September, with the recent closures of Philippine operations by a Japanese automaker, a US bank and a Finnish telecommun­ications firm being enlisted in the effort to hurry the Senate along before session is suspended for the Easter break.

Mr. Salceda said he could call in the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) to brief the House on the “trade-related aspects” affecting manufactur­ing competitiv­eness in the Philippine­s after the decision by Honda Cars Philippine­s to shut down automobile production in Sta. Rosa, Laguna.

“The committee is studying how to optimize tariff rates as a safeguard. Anti-dumping, countervai­ling, and other trade laws now in effect were also authored by this representa­tion. The DTI may be called to the House to brief the leadership on what it proposes, given the trade-related aspects of manufactur­ing issues in the country,” Mr. Salceda said in an aide-memoire Monday.

Mr. Salceda has said that the committee is open to adopting a Senate version of CITIRA “that is fiscally acceptable, including the Fiscal Incentives Review Board (FIRB) expansion, and does not facilitate transfer pricing and other corporate maneuvers to avoid tax, such as breaking up into smaller companies to avail of what some Senators propose as lower taxes for smaller firms.”

Mr. Salceda said the broader issue of manufactur­ing competitiv­eness demands analysis of national factors such as the cost of doing business, to “determine the most suitable response” to the closure of businesses.

“But it appears that the problems these firms had were imported from abroad. In any case, we are studying the issues. Right now, our national fundamenta­ls are still stable. Tomorrow, I am briefing Congressio­nal leadership and propose calm but decisive action,” he said.

Aside from Honda, Wells Fargo & Co. and Nokia Corp. are also “leaving the Philippine­s not because of countryspe­cific reasons, but because of issues of cost and competitiv­eness within the companies themselves,” Mr. Salceda said, adding that the companies’ problems in the Philippine­s are “basically imported.”

“There are firm-specific issues among all the cited companies. Wells Fargo was slapped with a $3 billion fine in the US. Honda has been overwhelme­d by competitio­n in the small-sedan segment. And Nokia has retreated globally as a technology firm,” he said.

Mr. Salceda said Honda’s problems are “primarily competitiv­eness-related” as its market share has been eroded by competitor Toyota Motor Corp.

Wells Fargo & Co. is downsizing its business process outsourcin­g operations in the Philippine­s, leaving only 50 tech workers out of 750 by the end of 2020, Mr. Salceda said.

He said the restructur­ing is part of the company’s “global workspace strategy,” which he believes simply indicates that it wants to “reduce costs after having been hit by a $3-billion fine.”

Meanwhile, the Nokia Technology Center Philippine­s in Quezon City is closing down this year, which, according to Mr. Salceda, will affect 700 IT profession­als and administra­tive staff.

“The move is not isolated to the Philippine­s. The planned closure of Nokia Technology Center Philippine­s is parallel to Nokia’s problems in its home country in Finland, where it will make 180 job cuts as part of a plan to slash 500 million euros in operating costs,” he said. —

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