Business World

Top business groups press Congress on 17 reform bills

- Jenina P. Ibañez

MORE THAN A DOZEN business groups are pressing Congress to pass 17 priority reform bills in its third and final session which opens later this month.

Fifteen business groups representi­ng various industries and foreign chambers wrote a letter to President Rodrigo R. Duterte advocating for the passage of 17 measures, which they say will help the economy recover from the coronaviru­s disease 2019 (COVID -19) pandemic.

“With one year left in the current Congress, we believe the 17 measures are achievable reforms that will generate substantia­l impact in achieving our shared vision of inclusive growth through job generation, poverty reduction, and global competitiv­eness,” the groups said in a statement on Wednesday.

“These reforms will also support economic recovery and higher GDP growth in 2022 and beyond in the wake of the COVID -19 pandemic.”

The business groups said that Congress should pass pending amendments to the Foreign Investment­s Act, Public Service Act, and Retail Trade Liberaliza­tion Act as these would open up the economy to more foreign investment.

They also support the creation of the Department of Disaster Resilience and Department of Water Resources Management.

They also backed the passage of the government’s remaining tax reform packages, namely the Property Valuation and Assessment Reform Act and Passive Income and Financial Intermedia­ry Taxation Act.

The former would broaden the property-related taxes of the government and generate more revenue for local government units “without increasing the existing tax rates or devising new

tax imposition­s,” while the latter aims to simplify the tax structure for financial instrument­s.

Mr. Duterte last month asked Congress to pass these last two tax reform bills, both of which are still pending at the Senate.

The business groups also supported measures on Ease of Paying Taxes, Electric Vehicles and Charging Stations, Freedom of Informatio­n, National Land Use and Management, Open Access in Data Transmissi­on, Philippine Creative Industries, Promotion of Digital Payments, Public Private Partnershi­p, Rural Agricultur­al and Fisheries Developmen­t Financing System, and Secrecy of Bank Deposits Law amendments.

“Most of these bills have reached advanced stages in Congress and require counterpar­t action in the House or Senate,” the groups said.

Senate President Vicente C. Sotto III said the same, noting in a mobile message that “most of these bills are in the advance stages in the Senate plenary.”

The groups said that they sent the letter in anticipati­on of the President’s final State of the Nation Address and Congress opening its third regular session on July 26. Separate letters were also sent to Mr. Sotto and to House Speaker Lord Allan Jay Q. Velasco.

The business groups include Alyansa Agrikultur­a, Bankers Associatio­n of the Philippine­s, Financial Executives Institute of the Philippine­s, Foundation for Economic Freedom, IT and Business Process Associatio­n of the Philippine­s, Makati Business Club, Management Associatio­n of the Philippine­s, Philippine Associatio­n of Multinatio­nal Companies Regional Headquarte­rs, Inc., and the Semiconduc­tor and Electronic­s Industries in the Philippine­s Foundation, Inc.

Foreign chambers that have signed the position paper include the American, Australian-New Zealand, Canadian, European, Japanese, and Korean business groups. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines