Philippine Daily Inquirer

BIR LINES UP PLANS, PROGRAMS FOR IMPLEMENTA­TION IN 2017

- —BENO. DE VERA

The Bureau of Internal Revenue will pursue this year the long-delayed plan to affix tax stamps on alcohol products to better monitor compliance to the Sin Tax Reform Law while combating illicit trade.

To achieve the P1.829-trillion taxtake target for 2017, almost four-fifths of the government’s tax revenue program of P2.313 trillion, Revenue Commission­er Caesar R. Dulay said the BIR was planning to improve taxpayer compliance through the expansion of its compromise settlement program for audit cases of large taxpayers.

With the implementa­tion of the unitary cigarette excise tax of P30 under Republic Act No. 10351 starting Jan. 1, Dulay reminded both the manufactur- ers and the consumers that only three colors of cigarette tax stamps remain.

Effective Jan. 1, all cigarettes for domestic consumptio­n will bear pink tax stamps; orange for imported cigarettes, and green for those to be exported, Dulay said in Revenue Memorandum Circular (RMC) No. 1-2017.

The public was advised by Dulay that the three other previously used colors—yellow, violet and blue—must no longer be affixed on cigarette packs.

The stamps would ensure that correct excise taxes had been paid.

Also a priority BIR program is the implementa­tion of the lnternal Revenue Stamps Integrated System (Irsis) for alcohol products and distilled spirits, Dulay said in RMCNo. 5-2017.

Dulay said the implementa­tion of Irsis for alcohol and distilled spirits would “ensure the collection of correct excise taxes on distilled spirits and wines and curb illicit trade of alcohol products.”

He said the BIR would expand the compromise settlement program “to broaden compromise settlement program available to taxpayers even during the pendency of the assessment process.”

“We’d rather encourage taxpayers to compromise, as long as it’s within the law. We also have a number of cases with the Court of Tax Appeals (CTA)—those were the assessment­s often being questioned, and my instructio­n to our legal department is to work out compromise and mediation because mitigation takes a long time and it does not help the taxpayer or the government in raising revenue,” he said.

He said cases pending at the CTA would be enjoined to undergo courtsuper­vised mediation.

The BIR will also continue the implementa­tion of the Run After Tax Evaders (Rate) and “Oplan Kandado” programs; comprehens­ive taxpayer profiling and industry benchmarki­ng; updating of zonal value schedules, and broadening of the tax base without increasing the rates by registerin­g unregister­ed taxpayers/businesses; centralize­d arrears management in regional offices, and adherence to the crossborde­r agreements on exchange of in- formation, Dulay said.

To improve taxpayer satisfacti­on, Dulay said the BIR would review previous revenue issuances and repeal those that imposed unnecessar­y burden on taxpayers and hinder business transactio­ns.

To protect revenue and recapture public trust, the BIR will put in place an integrity management program that will facilitate removal of corrupt and erring personnel; revalidate/audit tax assessment­s; propose legislatio­n removing the agency from the Salary Standardiz­ation Law (SSL); fast-track the hiring of 996 new staff, and use a case monitoring system for outstandin­g letters of authority, according to Dulay.

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