Mindanao Times

Taxpayers can now pay online -- DOF

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THE BUREAU of Internal Revenue (BIR) has launched a digital tax payments system allowing Filipinos to convenient­ly pay their taxes online using the electronic funds transfer service PESOnet, in line with the Duterte administra­tion’s goal to cut red tape and improve the ease of doing business to better serve the public and attract more investors.

Finance Undersecre­tary Antonette Tionko said the recent launch of the PESOnet-enabled tax payments service marks the start of the use of interopera­ble digital bills payment for taxes and other utilities in the country.

“Under this initiative, the BIR is the first government biller institutio­n to pilot and adopt the interopera­ble digital bills payment

service for tax collection,” Tionko said. This will help achieve the Duterte administra­tion’s goal of financial inclusion for all Filipinos while improving the ease of doing business in the country. She said the Department of Finance (DOF), under the leadership of Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III, is providing the necessary support to the BIR and the Bureau of Customs (BOC) to improve the ease of doing business through the digitaliza­tion of these two revenue agencies. Dominguez pointed out that this push for online tax payments is “in step with President Duterte’s goal of improving the lives of all Filipinos by making it easier for them to accomplish their official transactio­ns and at the same time improve the ease of doing business, which, in turn, will attract more investment­s and create more jobs.” “The goal of the PESOnet-enabled project is to set up an interopera­ble digital bills payment service that is safe, reliable, efficient, and will benefit a greater number of Filipinos,” Dominguez said. According to Tionko, PESOnet will not only improve the efficiency of the collection of tax and non-tax revenues for the government, but will also facilitate sales for businesses because the service will make it more convenient for the public to pay their bills at lower transactio­n cost at any time of the day. A Household Payments Baseline Survey conducted in 2016 showed that 73 percent of Filipinos pay their household bills (e.g. utility bills), and about 9 percent of them pay the government directly for taxes, social security contributi­ons, business permit fees and licenses, and permit fees. Both businesses and individual­s make 4 million monthly payfeature­s ments to the government for taxes, business permit fees, licenses, and social security contributi­ons with an estimated value of US$3.87 billion, the same survey showed. Tionko said that with the soft launch of the digital tax payments service, the BIR will be the pilot “biller,” while the tax collection/ payment will be the pilot “bill.” The Land Bank of the Philippine­s (LandBank) and the Rizal Commercial Banking Corporatio­n (RCBC) are the pilot participat­ing banks that will process the electronic collection­s of the taxes. Tionko said the DOF is working with the BIR to increase the number of participat­ing banks that will process tax payments via PESOnet. “The success of the pilot will allow the BSP to confidentl­y approve the expansion of this service to all interested financial and commercial institutio­ns,” Tionko said. PESOnet is under the National Retail Payment System (NRPS) framework instituted by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP). The BIR’s digital tax payments service is part of the E-PESO project of the BSP, the Philippine Payments Management, Inc. (PPMI), and BSP-supervised financial institutio­ns (BSFI) that is being implemente­d with assistance from the United States Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (USAID). Through the E-PESO project, the USAID is also assisting government institutio­ns adopt digital payments for revenue collection and disburseme­nt. BIR Commission­er Caesar Dulay said that with the launch of the PESOnet-enabled service, the bureau “will able to service more taxpayers and comply with the mandate of the law on the ease of doing business.” “And with great hope, we will be able to transition from a ‘Triple B Plus’ (credit rating) to perhaps an “A’-graded economy,” Dulay said at the soft launch of the PESOnet-enabled tax payments service last week. Dulay was referring to the Philippine­s’ highest credit rating so far that it got from Standard & Poor’s Global Ratings (S&P), which is now at “BBB+.” This rating is two notches higher than the minimum investment grade of BBB and only a step away from the “A” rating accorded the world’s most stable economies.

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