Philippine Daily Inquirer

FEBRUARY INFLATION SEEN AT 4.1%

- BENO. DE VERA

The higher excise tax rates slapped on “sin” products such as cigarettes at the start of the year pushed inflation faster in February to possibly hit a more than three-year high of 4.1 percent, the Department of Finance said Monday.

“Food and nonfood commoditie­s alike see their respective rate of price increase relatively unchanged while those of sin productsma­y have likely accelerate­d. The latter may be explained partly by price increase due to sin tax hikes and partly by the appropriat­e price adjustment­s of Mighty Corp. following its paying the right amount of taxes,” DOF Undersecre­tary and chief economist Gil S. Beltran

said in an economic bulletin.

A headline inflation of 4.1 percent year-onyear will be the fastest since the 4.3 percent posted in October 2014.

Under Republic Act No. 10963 or the Tax Reform for Accelerati­on and Inclusion (TRAIN) Act, the unitary excise tax slapped on cigarettes rose to P32.50 a pack effective Jan. 1 from P30 a pack last year.

The TRAIN law also mandated a further increase in the cigarette excise tax rates to P35 a pack from July 1, 2018, to Dec. 31, 2019; P37.50 a pack from Jan. 1, 2020, to Dec. 31, 2021, and P40 from Jan. 1, 2022, to Dec. 31, 2023.

Signed by President Duterte in December, the TRAIN law starting Jan. 1 this year also jacked up or slapped new excise taxes on oil, cigarettes, sugary drinks and vehicles, among other goods, to compensate for the restructur­ed personal income tax regime that raised the tax-exempt cap to an annual salary of P250,000.

Finance Undersecre­tary Karl Kendrick T. Chua earlier said the higher inflation in January was due to “better compliance in tobacco tax.”

For Beltran, while the 4.1percent forecast may have breached the high end of the target range, it was largely on account of the price increase of sin products.—

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