Philippine Daily Inquirer

PH tax gains cited in forum

- By Ronnel W. Domingo

PHILIPPINE gains on tax administra­tion reform and fiscal management will be part of discussion­s at the ninth yearly meeting of the Asia Pacific Tax Forum (APTF) that kicked off yesterday at the Makati Shangri-La.

“We are eager to learn from the Philippine­s’ example and we aim that all officials from business, the academe and government use the forum as a learning event to improve tax policies,” APTF co-founder Daniel Witt said at the start of the three-day event.

Witt also sits as president of the Washing- ton DC-based think tank Internatio­nal Tax and Investment Center which, along with the Public Finance Institute of the Philippine­s, serves as the APTF secretaria­t.

Further, Witt cited the Philippine­s’ recent credit rating upgrade from Standard & Poor’s to a notch below investment grade “as a good sign” that fiscal management here is going in the right direction.

“The APTF Manila meeting will examine how to balance fiscal and non-fiscal objectives with tax policy,” he said. “A country’s most important trade policy is its tax policy.”

The forum gathers 150 senior government officials, fiscal experts and industry representa­tives from across the region to discuss the latest developmen­ts, studies, issues and challenges in taxation.

The Bureau of Internal Revenue is in the middle of implementi­ng a $54.3-million revenue administra­tion reform project that is meant to help raise tax revenues and reduce tax evasion and corruption. The project covers the modernizat­ion of the revenue collection system as well as reforms within the BIR itself.

This project is part of a $434-million grant from United States-backed Millennium Challenge Corp. (MCC), which took effect last year.

Along with two other projects, the MCC package is meant to help reduce poverty in the Philippine­s.

The grant also provides funding for the $120-million Kapit-Bisig Laban sa KahirapanC­omprehensi­ve and Integrated Delivery of Social Services, which is meant to improve community-level infrastruc­ture and social services for the poor, and strengthen the capacity of local communitie­s address poverty.

A third component is the $214.44-million secondary national roads developmen­t project which is expected to reduce transporta­tion costs and improve access to markets and social services. This will be done through the rehabilita­tion of an existing 220-kilometer road segment on Samar Island.

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