Philippine Daily Inquirer

One-time tax amnesty program planned for next year

- By Ben O. de Vera @bendeveraI­NQ

After establishi­ng the credibilit­y of its fight against tax evasion with the success of its case against Mighty Corp., the Duterte administra­tion is considerin­g offering a “one-time, big-time” tax amnesty program next year, Budget Secretary Benjamin Diokno said.

Diokno told participan­ts of the 55th Philippine Economic Society Annual Meeting and Conference that he believed this was the best time to have an amnesty program.

To be able to implement a tax amnesty program, one must have the credibilit­y and capability to run after tax evaders, Diokno later told reporters.

“I think we have establishe­d enough credibilit­y at this time,” he said, citing the case of Mighty.

Early this year, Mighty cigarettes had been found bearing fake tax stamps to evade excise tax payments, such that the government slapped the homegrown manufactur­er three tax evasion cases worth nearly P38 billion.

The government eventually decided to settle with Mighty. Under the deal, the Bulacanbas­ed company had to sell P46.8 billion in assets to tobacco giant Japan Tobacco Internatio­nal. The government will also receive P30 billion to cover the tax deficienci­es.

As part of the tax settlement, the Department of Justice last month dismissed the tax evasion cases against Mighty owner Alexander Wongchukin­g, president Edilberto Adan, executive vice president Oscar Barrientos and treasurer Ernesto Victa.

Last year, Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III said that under its comprehens­ive tax reform program, the government was considerin­g amnesty for taxpayers with deficienci­es in payments of property taxes, estate taxes, regular taxes such as income taxes and value-added tax, and on pending cases in courts.

Dominguez had also said the Department of Finance was looking at settlement through payment of a minimum of 40percent basic tax as amnesty tax.

According to Dominguez, the amnesty program would be legislated “to clear up all tax cases.”

Separately, Finance Undersecre­tary Karl Kendrick T. Chua had said the plan to legislate a final amnesty would be “absolute” in the sense that its applicatio­n would clear all tax dockets in the Bureau of Internal Revenue, Bureau of Customs and the courts.

It would, however, exclude criminal cases, Chua said.

Once legislated, there would be no other tax amnesty for at least the next 25 years, he said.

The DO Falso plans to impose higher amounts for delayed amnesty payments and allow compromise deals for cases pending in the Court of Tax Appeals that have assessment­s.

In a statement on Wednesday, the DOF said excise tax collection­s from Mighty cigarettes jumped 200 percent to P6.2 billion in September to October, or after the local brand was acquired by JTI, from only P2.1 billion a year ago.

Dominguez had said the additional excise taxes to be collected from Mighty products under its new owner would reach P40 billion next year.

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