Philippine Daily Inquirer

RODY PUSHES 3 BILLS EASING HURDLES FOR FOREIGN INVESTORS

- By Ben O. de Vera @bendeveraI­NQ

President Duterte has urged Congress, especially the Senate, to fast-track three pending bills that will further open up the economy to more foreign investors and help it recover from a pandemic-induced recession.

In an April 12 letter to Senate President Vicente Sotto III, Mr. Duterte said he had certified the immediate passage of amendments to the Public Service Act, Foreign Investment­s Act and Retail Trade Liberaliza­tion Act.

The proposed changes to the antiquated Public Service and Foreign Investment­s laws would allow greater foreign participat­ion in previously restricted sectors while in the retail trade law, these would bring down the capitaliza­tion ceiling for foreign-led retailers that want to operate in the country.

Speaker Lord Allan Velasco also received the letter, a soft copy of which was sent by Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III to reporters on Tuesday.

Enacting these measures into law would “address the immediate and continuing need for legislativ­e reforms to provide a more conducive investment climate, increase job opportunit­ies, foster more competitio­n and further spur the country’s economic growth,” the President said.

Dominguez, the administra­tion’s chief economic manager, had said Congress should prioritize passing these bills as this action was more doable than pushing for Charter change to remove some economic restrictio­ns under the Constituti­on.

In a text message, Acting Socioecono­mic Planning Secretary Karl Kendrick Chua said the Senate had pledged to pass the three bills before Congress adjourns in June.

Chua, who heads the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority, said last month that their passage would boost the recently passed Corporate Recovery and Tax Incentives for Enterprise­s (CREATE) Act, which took effect on Monday.

CREATE Law slashed the income taxes slapped on corporatio­ns to 25 percent, while micro, small and medium enterprise­s enjoyed a bigger cut to 20 percent retroactiv­ely applied to July 2020. Before CREATE, the Philippine­s had the highest corporate income tax rate of 30 percent in the Asean region.

“To maximize the benefits from the enactment of CREATE, we urge Congress to urgently pass the amendments to the Public Service Act, Foreign Investment Act and Retail Trade Liberaliza­tion Act this year. These bills will complement CREATE by easing restrictio­ns on foreign investment­s,” he added.

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