Philippine Daily Inquirer

INVESTMENT COMMITMENT­S IN MANUFACTUR­ING DOWN IN ’17

- @roycanivel_INQ By Roy Stephen C. Canivel

Investment pledges registered by the Philippine Economic Zone Authority (Peza) for the manufactur­ing sector last year plunged by close to 50 percent due to the uncertaint­y brought about the Tax Reform for Accelerati­on and Inclusion (TRAIN).

New investment commitment­s registered by Peza dropped to P48.38 billion last year from the P90.24 billion reported in 2016, data showed.

This was the worst performanc­e of the sector in the agency’s history, according to Elmer San Pascual, manager of Peza’s promotion and public relations. He said the sector even managed to post a flat growth during the global financial crisis in 2008.

“The TRAIN [law] is the number one cause of uncertaint­y. You cannot get serious investors when there is uncertaint­y. Investors won’t invest especially in the manufactur­ing sector where huge costs are involved particular­ly for machinery,” he told reporters in Filipino.

Some local transactio­ns are on hold, he said.

The TRAIN law has been a subject of concern for many stakeholde­rs, both in government and private sector. The law, which is the first comprehens­ive tax reform package passed under the Duterte administra­tion, lowered the personal income tax of millions of Filipinos starting this year.

However, the law introduced offsetting measures to compensate for the revenue loss. These included a proposal to slap a 12-percent value added tax (VAT) on gross sales for local transactio­ns made by Peza-registered companies.

Prior to the tax package, Pezaregist­ered companies enjoyed zero-rated VAT for their local transactio­ns, with the amount estimated to reach P250 billion yearly. The TRAIN law temporaril­y kept this zero-rated status, but would remove it under the condition that an enhanced refund system was been put in place.

Companies were confused particular­ly with the President’s veto of some TRAIN provisions in December last year. One of those vetoed was the provision that intended to remove the zero-rated status immediatel­y.

Prior to last year, the manufactur­ing sector normally accounted for 80 to 85 percent of investment commitment­s under Peza, Pascual said. However, in 2017, the sector accounted for just a little more than 20 percent.

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