Philippine Daily Inquirer

Breaking down the tax reform package

- SOLITA COLLAS-MONSOD

This table, from the Department of Finance, shows its estimates of the combined impact of the “TARA sa TRAIN” (Tax Administra­tion Reform Act, Tax Reform for Accelerati­on and Inclusion) on Filipino households (hh).

The first column breaks down the households by decile (definition: each of 10 equal groups into which a population can be divided according to the distributi­on of values of a particular variable, which in this case is household income). Thus, you have the column listing from D1 to D10. The highest income decile (D10) is further broken down into the top 1 percent (P100), and even further into the top 0.1 percent (P1,000). This further subdivisio­n is done so we can see what the tax reform does to this elite class.

The second column describes the characteri­stics of each of the deciles. Note that the bottom 50 percent of income earners are either “Subsistenc­e Poor,” “Poor” or “Near Poor.” Note that the “MinimumWag­e Worker” comes in the seventh decile, and the highest (tenth) income decile is only where the “Middle Class” begins.

That decile is further broken down into “Executive,” those who belong to the top 1 percent, and still further into the top onetenth of one percent are labeled “CEO.”

Now we come to the third column, which shows the 2018 monthly hh total income by decile. The DOF assumes that each hh has two income earners. The next seven columns give the impact of each of the tax measures in the tax reform package plus the effect of inflation.

The last column summarizes the final impact: the resulting change in take-home pay. Visually, without even looking at the details, the reader can see that the bottom 60 percent of income earners are negatively impacted by the package (the figures are in italics, and are parenthesi­zed) as well as the top 0.1 percent. Those are the DOF estimates.

To make up for the minuses, there is a complicate­d and not yet worked out system of transfers that add up to P3,000 a year for the first five deciles and P1,500 for the next two (up to the seventh decile). BUT: This is relief that lasts only four years. WHY ONLY FOUR YEARS? No one who has critiqued my stand has answered.

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