Philippine Daily Inquirer

WEAK PESO TO BOOST CUSTOMS TAKE

- —BENO. DEVERA

The weak peso is expected to further shore up the collection­s of the Bureau of Customs (BOC) and raise additional revenues that the government can use to build more infrastruc­ture, the Department of Finance’s chief economist said.

Finance Undersecre­tary Gil Beltran told reporters that for every P1 depreciati­on of the local currency, the country's second-biggest tax-collection agency stood to gain P11 billion in additional import duties and other taxes.

Of the projected additional revenues, 18 percent or P2 billion would come from oil prod- ucts, Beltran added.

Last week, the Cabinet-level Developmen­t Budget Coordinati­on Committee projected the peso-dollar exchange rate to average 52.50-53:$1 this year and 52-55:$1 starting next year until 2022, a higher range than the previous assumption of 50-53:$1.

The peso slid to 13-year lows on the back of concerns on the widening deficit of the current account, a component of the country’s balance of payments.

As of end-June, the current account deficit ballooned to $3.1 billion—equivalent to 1.9 percent of gross domestic product, from $133 million or only 0.1 percent of GDP a year ago, mainly due to an also wider trade-in-goods deficit as imports sustained strong growth while merchandis­e exports dropped.

The BOC had attributed its above-target collection­s so far this year partly due to the peso depreciati­on as a weaker currency raises the value of imported products as well as the amount of taxes slapped on them.

As of end-September, the BOC’s collection­s totaled P435.9 billion, up 35 percent year-onyear and also 1.5-percent higher than the nine-month goal of P429.6 billion.

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