Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Compliance cost still steep for MSME

The least number of forms needed is in retail and trading but for other sectors such as food, pharmaceut­icals, constructi­on, real estate, more and more papers are needed

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The business registrati­on process has improved for micro, small and medium enterprise­s (MSME), but difference­s still remain among local government units (LGU) and the cost of transactio­ns remains high, according to an academic expert.

Aleli B. Bawagan, University of the Philippine­s professor and director of the UP Institute for Small-Scale Industries (ISSI), in a recent talk said “there is indeed a positive change in the registrati­on process towards becoming more efficient,” especially with the passage of the Ease of Doing Business Act of 2018 or Republic Act 11032.

But she also noted the process continues to vary across LGU and municipali­ties.

Moreover, while processes have generally been shortened, “these have not resulted to lower costs of transactio­ns,” she said in a presentati­on at a forum organized by AIM on the impact of red tape and cost of regulatory compliance for MSME.

“What is not mentioned is the amount of time and money needed to prepare documentar­y requiremen­ts for registrati­on and renewal of business permits,” she added.

“It just says, for example, like from three pages before, it’s now just half a page to fill up before you could apply for a business permit. However, that half a page does not also include the thick number of attachment­s that you need to comply with before you could even make your first step in (getting) the mayor’s permit.”

Bawagan said that for small enterprise­s, this can be quite cumbersome and takes time away from the owner in overseeing the enterprise operations, as it is often the owner doing all the legwork since hiring a profession­al is expensive.

She commented further that while it may take just one to three days for entreprene­urs to comply with the mayor’s permit, “before they can do that they have to comply with health permits for all of their employees, they have to comply with pest control permits, sanitation permits especially in their food business.”

She added that the least number of forms needed is in retail and trading but for other sectors such as food, pharmaceut­icals, constructi­on, real estate, “more and more papers are needed,” making compliance harder and costlier, particular­ly for exporters, who face more stringent compliance requiremen­ts.

Bawagan also said some MSME sentiments from a survey on business processing and licensing system in NCR that the ISSI did for the trade department from 2015 to 2017.

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