Philippine Daily Inquirer

GOV’T EYES TIE-UP WITH CHINA’S JACK MA

- By Roy Stephen C. Canivel @roycanivel_INQ

The Philippine Exporters Confederat­ion Inc. (Philexport) wants the government to offer incentives under the second tax reform package specifical­ly designed for micro, small and medium-sized enterprise­s (MSMEs).

Philexport said that it wanted to see some fiscal and nontax incentives in the second tax reform package, which the Department of Finance has recently submitted to Congress.

After passing the first package—also known as the TRAIN law—in December last year, the government is now pushing the second in a series of tax reform packages.

While the TRAIN law lowered the personal income taxes of many Filipinos and raised consumptio­n taxes, the second package seeks to cut corporate income tax and rationaliz­e tax incentives.

Some of the incentives that Philexport wanted included tax deductions for research and training of registered export firms located outside economic and freeport zones, valueadded tax (VAT) exemption on customs duty for imported export inputs, and exemption from wharfage and export tax.

“This will level the playing field in providing same footing of competitiv­eness for our (small- and medium-size) exporters regardless of their location. Likewise,

this is part of the effort to reduce the cost of doing business,” it said.

The group added that there should also be nontax incentives such as simplifica­tion, reduction and harmonizat­ion of procedures and time-bound process- ing of export documents.

Packaging materials, moulds, tools and utilities used for export production should be also included in the list of raw materials exempt from VAT, Philexport said.

According to DOF presentati­ons given to industry groups, the second tax package would rationaliz­e investment tax incentives by providing a single menu of incentives across all investment promotion agencies like Peza.

Eventually, the government intends to reduce the corporate income tax rate from 30 per- cent to 25 percent by 2022.

This, however, is only under the condition that the corporate income tax would drop by one percentage point for every reduction in investment tax perks equivalent to 0.15 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) in 2018 or an estimated P26 billion.

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