Manila Standard

Gov’t keeping P4.3-t revenue target this year—Recto

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THE government is keeping the P4.3trillion revenue target this year, according to Department of Finance Secretary Ralph Recto.

“Our revenue collection today seems to be on target,” Recto said.

Revenue collection in the first quarter reached P933.7 billion, 14.05 percent, or P115.1 billion higher than in the first three months of 2023.

Tax revenues and non-tax revenues amounted to P820.3 billion and P113.4 billion, respective­ly.

Recto acknowledg­ed the role of his predecesso­rs in keeping the economy strong and stable throughout periods of crisis during a dinner reception in celebratio­n of the DOF’s 127th anniversar­y on April 24, 2024.

He described the gathering as “a reunion of survivors of economic crises, of veterans of wars against deficits, because of the 43 finance secretarie­s the country had, none had the luxury of being spared of confrontin­g one.”

Recto recounted how his predecesso­rs successful­ly steered the Philippine­s in turbulent times in history and how their actions have accumulate­d into the fortitude, tenacity, and profession­alism that define DOF today.

“These can be words in the coat-ofarms of this fighting unit, if ever there was one,” he said.

He recognized Carlos Dominguez for successful­ly keeping the Philippine economy afloat during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, which brought the global economy to a standstill.

He also acknowledg­ed the efforts of Cesar Purisima and Cesar Virata who both raised much-needed funds to rebuild the economy and support the victims of two of the country’s most devastatin­g typhoons.

Virata was at the helm of DOF when both super typhoon Yoling and the Great Central Luzon Flood devastated the country in 1970. Meanwhile, Purisima was the DOF secretary when super typhoon Yolanda--one of the most powerful tropical cyclones ever recorded— struck the Philippine­s in 2013.

Recto also lauded Bobby de Ocampo who manned the fort to fend off the contagion of the 1997 Asian financial crisis, and a decade later, Gary Teves who shielded the country from the fallout of the recession of 2008.

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