Philippine Daily Inquirer

REGIONAL PACTS TO BOOST PH BID TO SLAP VAT ON DIGITAL SERVICES

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The Philippine­s should continue to explore multilater­al options to secure the cooperatio­n of foreign online platforms in its bid to tax digital transactio­ns, state think tank Philippine Institute for Developmen­t Studies (PIDS) said.

In a research paper, PIDS said options include signing regional tax treaties with blocs like the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) and European Union that would help smaller economies like the Philippine­s consolidat­e negotiatin­g power, and make multinatio­nal online platforms share informatio­n that local tax collectors need to capture digital transactio­ns.

The PIDS paper titled “Rethinking Taxation in the Digital Economy: Approaches to Harnessing Online Markets” was authored by Emerson Bañez, assistant professor at the University of the Philippine­s College of Law.

”Cross-border tax administra­tion will depend on a baseline of internatio­nal cooperatio­n, which can be secured through renegotiat­ion of bilateral treaties with countries where online platforms are sited,” Bañez said.

”However, unless smaller economies find additional leverage or combine their negotiatin­g power, such bilateral ties can only offer limited gains,” he added.

Amid a pandemic-led boom e-commerce transactio­ns, among the priority measures of the Marcos administra­tion is to impose value-added tax (VAT) on digital service providers (DSPs) like Netflix, Spotify, Facebook and Google.

The measure seeks to level the playing field between local and foreign DSPs by clarifying that services they provide in the country are subject to VAT. Based on latest estimates by the Department of Finance, the current form of the legislatio­n is expected to bring in a total of P83.8 billion in revenues from 2024 to 2028.

But Bañez argued that optimizing the local tax base and passing new legislatio­ns— which may not even apply to firms headquarte­red abroad where the Philippine­s has no jurisdicti­on—“can only go so far.”

If taking the multilater­al approach, Bañez said efforts at negotiatin­g and crafting provisions should take into account the country’s trading power relative to peers as well as its comparativ­e ability to exercise jurisdicti­on.

“The Philippine­s can consider an incrementa­l approach. For instance, it may enter into an OECD (Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t) framework-like agreement with regional blocs (Asean, EU). Such blocs can negotiate as an organizati­on to counterbal­ance the larger economies,” he said.—IAN

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