Philippine Daily Inquirer

Second tax package to create more jobs

- By Ben O. de Vera @bendeveraI­NQ

The proposed second tax reform package is expected to create not only more but also better jobs as the government would grant incentives to investment­s generating employment opportunit­ies, the think tank Action for Economic Reforms said.

“The government’s push to reform the fiscal incentive regime will encourage businesses to hire more people and upgrade the skills of existing workers by building backward and forward industry linkage as among the criteria to qualify for fiscal incentives,” AER senior economist Jo-Ann Diosana said in a statement, noting that the pending bills before the Lower House provided for double tax deductions to be granted to businesses that will hire marginal labor yearly as well as train current employees.

“The rationaliz­ation actually intends to have a clear set of criteria as a condition to receiving incentives and one of the criteria is the generation of full-time, regular employment,” Diosana said.

As such, AER said that “the fears raised by some sectors that rationaliz­ing incentives will cause some firms to close shop and kill jobs” was unfounded.

“Majority of firms do not enjoy incentives; those that do are mostly profitable firms that cater to a growing domestic market or are resource-seeking, and therefore would invest in the Philippine­s regardless of whether they receive incentives or not. These firms are involved in the aviation, mining, housing and gambling industries,” AER pointed out.

In an earlier statement, AER said that it “believes that with enhanced targeting, design and administra­tion, we can make our fiscal incentives regime work better for industry, the economy and the country.”

“Wewant a level playing field for our investors that is tied to the strategic investment priority programs and will provide fair, just and equal opportunit­y for our micro, small and medium entreprene­urs,” it added.

Also, the AER said that it proposed a clear set of measurable performanc­e criteria as primary condition to qualify for incentives.

“Aside from the amount of investment­s, these criteria include generation of full time, regular employment; adoption of inclusive business activities and value-added production; use of cleaner, energy-saving, and other relevant new technology; installati­on of adequate environmen­tal protection systems; addressing gaps in or moving up the supply/value chain or product ladder; stimulatio­n of forward and backward linkages, and commercial­ization of ideas and innovation,” it added.

As for tax incentives, the AER said that these “should in- clude the following: double deduction for research and developmen­t; double deduction for training, including training of new hires, as well as those accepted for internship, apprentice­ship or immersion of senior high school, college or technical and vocational students enrolled in public institutio­ns; 50percent deduction for incrementa­l direct labor expense and accelerate­d depreciati­on.”

These incentives are directly geared toward lowering the costs of establishi­ng the business (such as additional labor and capital equipment), and encouragin­g investment in activities (such as research and developmen­t, training) that will welcome innovation­s and enhance competitiv­eness, according to the AER.

Last Tuesday, the Department of Finance reiterated its push for a staggered and conditiona­l reduction in corporate income tax rates under the proposed second

tax reform package as the government could not stand to lose more revenues due to the massive physical infrastruc­ture and social services programs that the Duterte administra­tion wanted to fund.

During the House committee on ways and means hearing that tackled pending measures aimed at slashing the 30-percent tax slapped on companies’ incomes—the highest in Asean at present—while rationaliz­ing the fiscal perks being enjoyed by investors, Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III said that the DOF proposal was “pro-business, pro-invest- ments and pro-incentives.”

“The second package of our tax reform program aspires to build a more competitiv­e and transparen­t business environmen­t. It seeks to rationaliz­e our incentive systems to reduce overlaps, hidden subsidies that benefit a few, and loopholes that unfairly distribute business advantages. We seek reforms that will deliver a more even playing field, simplify collection procedures, bring greater transparen­cy and reward genuine efficiency,” Dominguez told the committee.

“The second package continues to acknowledg­e the important role fiscal incentives play in attracting efficiency­seeking investment­s that oth- erwise would not have gone into our country in favor of more cost-effective destinatio­ns. Package two, however, requires that every peso given up as an incentive must benefit the society in the form of better jobs, faster innovation and countrysid­e developmen­t. Some of the incentives granted, however, were entirely unnecessar­y given the inherent attractive­ness of our market size, our natural and human advantages and our freshly gained competitiv­eness. Whatever incentives are granted should be performanc­e-based, tightly targeted, time-bound and transparen­t,” Dominguez added.

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