Mindanao Times

CTRP packages gain headway in Congress

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GOVERNMENT made history in 2019 when on its watch, excise taxes on tobacco products were raised twice under one administra­tion, and a new set of ‘sin’ taxes on electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes) were introduced to deter smoking while augmenting funds for the cashintens­ive Universal Health Care (UHC) program that will primarily benefit lowincome families.

Before the close of 2019, a bill imposing higher excise taxes on alcohol products, and an increase in the tax rates for e-cigarettes, such as heated tobacco products (HTPs) and vapor (vaping) products was approved by the Congress and is now up for President Duterte’s signature.

These new ‘sin’ tax measures comprise Package 2-plus of the Duterte administra­tion’s comprehens­ive tax reform program (CTRP), which seeks to make Philippine taxation fair and transparen­t even as it provides a steady revenue stream for the government’s accelerate­d spending on infrastruc­ture and human capital developmen­t, in keeping with the President’s ultimate goal of improving the life of every Filipino.

Tobacco excise taxes were first raised under the Duterte administra­tion through the Tax Reform for Accelerati­on and Inclu

sion Act (TRAIN), the first CTRP package, which, on top of benefiting 99 percent of wage earners in the form of substantia­l personal income tax (PIT) cuts, also mandated a fuel marking program to curb oil smuggling, and imposed a tax on sweetened beverages as a health measure.

“All the hard work we put in to reform our policies and build an inclusive economy have resulted in a palpable improvemen­t in the lives of our people,” Dominguez said.

TRAIN, which has so far raised P91.3 billion in revenues in the first nine months of 2019, also exempted medicines to manage hypertensi­on, diabetes and high cholestero­l from the value-added tax (VAT).

The tobacco tax hikes under TRAIN from the thenP30 per pack unitary rate to an increase of only P2.50 per year, however, was too little to make a dent in funding UHC.

Thus, the DOF worked with lawmakers to legislate a new law that would significan­tly increase tobacco excise taxes anew.

Last July 25, President Duterte signed into LAW Republic Act (RA) 11346, which raised the excise tax on tobacco products to P45 per pack beginning in 2020, followed by a series of P5per-pack increases until the rate reaches P60 in 2023. Thereafter, the tax rate will increase by 5 percent every year.

RA 11346 also includes a provision taxing e-cigarettes by at least P10 per millimeter for e-juices with high nicotine concentrat­ions, also known as nicotine salt. Under the bill up for the President’s signature, this minimal rate has since increased to be closer to that of cigarettes based on comparativ­e consumptio­n patterns.

“We are the only administra­tion that actually cleaned up the cigarette industry and raised tobacco excise taxes twice. This has never happened in any past administra­tion,” Dominguez said.

Dominguez, who led the Department of Finance (DOF) in closely engaging the Congress to work on the swift approval of higher ‘sin’ taxes for UHC, was referring to the time when the DOF “cleaned up” the cigarette business by collecting from an errant cigarette manufactur­er--Mighty Corp.--more than P30 billion for non-payment of excise taxes and for use of counterfei­t tax stamps.

This marked the biggest sum on record raised by the government from a tax settlement with a single corporate taxpayer.

The Finance chief has constantly reminded the public of this feat to show that the Duterte government is serious in improving tax administra­tion and running after tax evaders.

Raising tobacco excise taxes twice under a single administra­tion was no easy feat. The administra­tion of former President Benigno Aquino III considered the passage of the first ‘Sin’ Tax Reform Law on his watch as a landmark measure, given that the government then had to overcome a strong industry lobby and tedious congressio­nal debates to be able to sign it into law.

Revenues from RA 11346 and the ‘sin’ tax bill pending in Malacañang will help fill the funding requiremen­t for UHC of P257 billion in 2020, which will grow by an average of around P11 billion to P12 billion per year, or a five-year total of around P1.44 trillion by 2024.

The government can cover funding for UHC at around P200 billion yearly in the national budget, but needs to raise the gap through sin taxes and other means.

The Duterte administra­tion wants to implement the UHC program as a “first-class law at par with the world’s best healthcare systems,” while discouragi­ng vices such as smoking and binge drinking, Dominguez said, which is why the DOF had tried to push the Congress to approve substantia­l increases in ‘sin’ taxes.

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