The Freeman

Chua: Granting tax perks not the only way

- Carlo S. Lorenciana, Staff Member

Granting tax incentives is not the only way to directly help firms.

Finance undersecre­tary Karl Kendrick Chua said there are better ways to support companies amid criticisms against the government’s corporate tax reform, which seeks to rationaliz­e fiscal incentives and seen by many as a deterrent to investors.

Chua spoke about the Tax Reform for Attracting Better and Highqualit­y Opportunit­ies (TRABAHO) bill at the multi-sectoral consultati­on on the Strategic Investment Priorities Plan (SIPP) in Cebu City yesterday.

Chua pointed out the medium-term real solution to support business growth is to address infrastruc­ture gaps and fight corruption.

He also raised the need to solve the inefficien­cy in government and complex business regulation­s.

He added the government can also use more efficient and targeted subsidies such as skills training, power and lifeline subsidies.

Chua reiterated the need for the government to implement the second package its comprehens­ive tax reform considerin­g the Philippine­s has the highest corporate income tax rate in Southeast Asia at 30%.

TRABAHO bill proposes to bring down corporate income taxe (CIT) by a third to 20% and cut income tax holidays and duty-free imports, causing uncertaint­ies among investors.

Chua noted that while revenue from corporate taxes is increasing, "efficiency so very low."

"We have a very complex tax incentives plan. We grant the most generous fiscal incentives since they are in lieu of all taxes and given forever," he said, reiteratin­g the need for incentives to be performanc­e-based, targeted, time-bound and transparen­t.

The Philippine­s is in the midst of an ambitious tax reform to raise revenue to help fund its P8-trillion infrastruc­ture plan.

The Department of Finance had estimated the proposed lowering of the CIT by 2 percentage points every 2 years starting 2021 until 2029 will create over a million jobs by freeing up more capital for firms to invest and hire more workers.

“With lower tax rates, such a proposal is hardly inflationa­ry while creating over a million jobs over the medium term as firms expand with more money at their disposal,” Chua said.

The reform bill seeks to rationaliz­e incentives enjoyed by just a select group of private companies, many of them in the country's list of Top 1,000 corporatio­ns.

In contrast, some 90,000 small and medium enterprise­s (SMEs), and some of the hundreds of thousands more micro enterprise­s have to pay the steep rate of 30 percent under the convoluted corporate tax system that has not been changed for over two decades now. SMEs employ around 33 percent of the local labor force according to 2016 data from the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI).

The House of Representa­tives has already passed its version of this reform proposal called the Tax Reform for Attracting Better and Highqualit­y Opportunit­ies (TRABAHO) bill. The Senate is still discussing at the committee level its version of this measure authored by Senate President Vicente Sotto III and dubbed the Corporate Income Tax and Incentives Reform Act.

During his 3rd State of the Nation Address (SONA) last July 23, President Duterte had called on both legislativ­e chambers to pass the remaining CTRP packages before the end of 2018.

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 ?? PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO ?? Finance undersecre­tary Karl Kendrick Chua said there are better ways to support companies amid criticisms against the government’s corporate tax reform, which seeks to rationaliz­e fiSCAL INCENTIVES AND SEEN BY MANY AS A DETERRENT TO INVESTORS.
PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO Finance undersecre­tary Karl Kendrick Chua said there are better ways to support companies amid criticisms against the government’s corporate tax reform, which seeks to rationaliz­e fiSCAL INCENTIVES AND SEEN BY MANY AS A DETERRENT TO INVESTORS.
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