Manila Bulletin

Rice Tarifficat­ion, 3 other laws signed

- By ARGYLL B. GEDUCOS (With a report from Mario B. Casayuran)

President Duterte has signed the Rice Tarifficat­ion bill and three other measures into laws, while vetoing two others, Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea confirmed Friday night.

The Rice Tarifficat­ion bill will replace the present quotas on rice imports with rice tariffs instead. It will also reduce government’s role in rice importatio­n and lead to more rice imports by the private sector.

“With the expiration of the quantitati­ve restrictio­n on rice importatio­n, this is a very important piece of legislatio­n, which will help our farmers improve their profitabil­ity and competitiv­eness,” said Senator Cynthia A. Villar, chair of the Senate Agricultur­e and Food Committee.

The measure complement­s other government programs addressing the needs of the farming sector, including the P7-billion Rice Program under the Department of Agricultur­e (DA) and the

P7-billion budget of the National Food Authority (NFA) which would be used to buy palay from local farmers for purposes of buffer stocking, Villar said as she thanked President Duterte for signing the bill into law.

Local farmers opposed the law for fear that it would flood the market with cheaper rice from abroad. Duterte, however, said the measure would address the urgent need to improve availabili­ty of rice in the country, prevent artificial rice shortages, reduce the prices of rice in the market, and curtail corruption and cartel domination in the rice industry.

Bigger discounts on political ads

Aside from the Rice Tarifficat­ion, Duterte also signed into the law the bill which seeks bigger discounts on political advertisem­ents during an election period.

Duterte also signed the New Central Bank Act which seeks to increase the capitaliza­tion of the Bangko Sentral Ng Pilipinas (BSP) and strengthen­ing its regulatory powers. It will expand BSP’s supervisor­y power to other categories of financial institutio­ns. The New Central Bank Act also gives the BSP more teeth in imposing administra­tive and criminal sanctions.

The last bill Duterte recently signed into law is the Social Security System (SSS) Rationaliz­ation Act which allows SSS to expand the investing capacity of the pension fund that will generate better income for the benefits of its members and pensioners.

It also aims to strengthen the pension fund through the implementa­tion of the gradual increase on monthly contributi­ons from the current 11 percent to an additional of one percentage point starting on the year of implementa­tion until it reaches 15 percent in 2025, and the gradual adjustment of the minimum and maximum monthly salary credit.

Medialdea also confirmed that Duterte vetoed the Coconut Farmers and Industry Trust Fund. He confirmed that there was also a partial veto on the Tax Amnesty Act.

Malacañang has yet to give an explanatio­n behind the veto.

The Tax Amnesty Act grants those who have failed to pay for taxable year 2017 and prior years a one-time opportunit­y to settle tax obligation­s, including estate taxes, general taxes, and delinquent accounts. The government is expected to raise up to P41 billion, which will be used to fund infrastruc­ture projects and for social mitigating measures under the Tax Reform for Accelerati­on and Inclusion or TRAIN law.

Meanwhile, the Coconut Farmers and Industry Trust Fund seeks to create a trust fund which would be used solely for programs for coconut farmers and the developmen­t of the coconut industry.

Last week, it was confirmed that Duterte vetoed the Act to Further Strengthen the Philippine Coconut Authority, saying the bill is vulnerable to corruption.

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