Business World

Computeriz­ing accounting systems: COVID-19 spurs move to digitize

- ZORAYDA H. PANUMPANG and JUNE CATHERINE G. TAÑEDO ZORAYDA H. PANUMPANG and JUNE CATHERINE G. TAÑEDO are Senior Directors from the Tax Division of SGV & Co.

The Philippine­s remains under various levels of community quarantine due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Government and private offices are temporaril­y closed or maintain limited operations with alternativ­e work schemes such work-from-home. These measures have naturally affected business operations and processes. There has also been a noted increase in the use of online selling platforms as companies and entreprene­urs try to continue or augment operations during the quarantine.

The transition to digital platforms has not been without compliance challenges. Businesses have experience­d difficulti­es in issuing duly authorized invoices or receipts because of the expiration of the Authority to Print, the inaccessib­ility of invoices and receipts, or the near impossibil­ity of mailing or sending them during the enhanced community quarantine ( ECQ) from March 16 to May 31. This greatly limited sales and collection since these documents are vital for claiming deductions and input VAT.

To address this, the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) allowed businesses to adopt work-around procedures such as electronic­ally sending invoices and receipts during the ECQ, subject to certain guidelines and procedures in Revenue Memorandum Circular (RMC) No. 47-2020.

These circumstan­ces and experience­s highlight the importance of digitizing business operations and processes. It is certainly high time for businesses to adopt a computeriz­ed accounting system ( CAS). For those with an existing CAS, this may be the opportunit­y to modify or enhance it to update bookkeepin­g, invoicing and accounting processes. One challenge though is that the BIR requires prior authorizat­ion or permit to use a CAS, computeriz­ed books of account (CBA) and/or its components. Revenue Memorandum Order ( RMO) No. 212000, issued on July 17, as amended by RMO No. 292002, issued on Sept. 16, required all taxpayers with a CAS or their components, to apply for a Permit to Use (PTU). The RMO also required taxpayers to apply for a new PTU for any system enhancemen­t that will result in changes to the system’s release and/or version number.

PROCEDURE UNDER RMO NO. 21-2000, AS AMENDED

Under the RMO, all applicatio­ns for CAS are to be generally filed by a company’s head office at the Large Taxpayers Office (LTO) or Revenue District Office (RDO) having jurisdicti­on over the head office.

The applicatio­n will only be processed if the RMO requiremen­ts are complete. These include documentat­ion on the functions and features of the applicatio­n, system flow, process flow, back-up procedure, disaster and recovery plan, proof of ownership, reports, correspond­ences, receipts and invoices that can be generated from the system with a sample layout.

The applicatio­n will then be evaluated and approved by a Computeriz­ed System Evaluation Team ( CSET) at the BIR national or regional office. The evaluation will include a system demonstrat­ion showing actual use of the CAS.

Under the RMO, as amended, the PTU should be issued within 10 to 40 days, depending on certain conditions. In the experience of some taxpayers, however, the evaluation takes longer. The delay is usually due to the difficulty in scheduling the system demonstrat­ion and addressing issues identified by the CSET during the demonstrat­ion.

CENTRALIZA­TION OF CAS APPLICATIO­NS

In 2015, the BIR issued RMC No. 682015, creating the National Accreditat­ion Board (NAB) composed of BIR officers from various divisions in the BIR National Office. The RMC directed that accreditat­ion of cash register machines (CRM), point-of-sale systems (POS), and other sales machines/receipting software were to be processed at the BIR National Office level only through the NAB.

While RMC No. 68-2015 specifical­ly covered the accreditat­ion of CRM, POS, etc., the NAB also took on the responsibi­lity of evaluating CAS applicatio­ns of taxpayers registered under the RDOs.

Some would say that, as a result of the centraliza­tion, the scheduling of system demonstrat­ions and evaluation of the applicatio­ns took much longer because the national body was alone in handling all CAS applicatio­ns of taxpayers under the RDOs. Others believe that this has contribute­d to a backlog of pending applicatio­ns.

SUSPENSION OF REQUIREMEN­T FOR A PTU

Early this year, the BIR issued RMC No. 10-2020, suspending the requiremen­ts for a PTU. This was carried out to promote ease of doing business and more efficient government service delivery. The RMC also reverted the processing of CAS applicatio­ns to the RDOs as well as simplified documentar­y requiremen­ts.

Specifical­ly, all taxpayers with pending PTU applicatio­ns (including those that had undergone system demonstrat­ions) will be allowed to use a CAS, CBA, and/or their components, without the PTU, provided the relevant requiremen­ts are submitted to the Technical Working Group (TWG) Secretaria­t of the RDO or Large Taxpayer Office (LTO) where they are registered. These requiremen­ts include a duly accomplish­ed and notarized Sworn Statement and various attachment­s (i.e., Summary of System Descriptio­n, Commercial invoice/receipts/document descriptio­n, and special power of attorney, among others); sample printouts of system-generated principal and supplement­ary receipts or invoices; and sample printouts of system-generated Books of Account.

Instead of the PTU, an Acknowledg­ment Certificat­e (AC) with a Control Number will be issued by the TWG Secretaria­t — within three working days from receiving the requiremen­ts. The Control Number should then be indicated on the system- generated principal and/or supplement­ary receipts/ invoices. Taxpayers should be aware that a post-approval evaluation may be conducted to check compliance with revenue issuances. This can take place during a BIR audit or investigat­ion.

For any system enhancemen­t, modificati­on and/or upgrade that results in a change of version number and/or systems release, the taxpayer is now only required to inform the TWG Secretaria­t where it is registered. This is done in writing accompanie­d by a matrix showing the comparativ­e changes in the current and upgraded system.

The RMC specifical­ly referred to taxpayers with pending PTU applicatio­ns with the BIR. It is not clear if this simplified procedure is the same for new applicatio­ns filed after its effectivit­y. Moreover, the RMC provides that the BIR release separate revenue issuances on the detailed procedures implementi­ng the RMC and the post- approval evaluation check. Pending more succinct implementa­tion guidelines, the RDOs and LTOs may interpret the RMC differentl­y.

The issuance of RMC No. 10-2020 is one of the many steps taken by the BIR to achieve its plans for a more digitized tax environmen­t, encouragin­g compliance from taxpayers by allowing them, in the meantime, to use their existing CAS without a PTU. This also gives them the opportunit­y to start preparing for the upcoming implementa­tion of the mandatory e-invoicing and electronic sales-reporting requiremen­t under the TRAIN Act in 2023.

RMC No. 10-2020 is certainly a welcome developmen­t for taxpayers particular­ly at this time when businesses may need to digitize to adapt and thrive during the pandemic. In the meantime, taxpayers eagerly await the immediate issuance of the implementi­ng procedures to allow for greater clarity and a more uniform and effective applicatio­n of the RMC. This would, once and for all, streamline the procedures for using CAS.

This article is for general informatio­n only and is not a substitute for profession­al advice where the facts and circumstan­ces warrant. The views and opinions expressed above are those of the authors and do not necessaril­y represent the views of SGV & Co.

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