The Philippine Star

Foreign biz groups push for modernizat­ion of BOC

- By RICHMOND S. MERCURIO

Foreign business groups in the Philippine­s have renewed their call to Senate and House leaders to pass the bill that seeks to modernize the country’s customs administra­tion, making it more competitiv­e and respected globally. In a statement over the weekend, the Joint Foreign Chambers (JFC) pressed lawmakers to immediatel­y pass the Customs Modernizat­ion and Tariff Act (CMTA) in view of the need to create a Bureau of Customs that “will be respected by all for its honesty and efficiency.”“In today’s fastchangi­ng global economy, the Philippine­s must modernize its customs administra­tion to keep up with changing internatio­nal standards, to make customs valuation and inspection pro- cedures more transparen­t and predictabl­e, and to implement automated procedures,” the JFC said. “The costs of the entire logistics chain which connects Philippine agricultur­e and industry to foreign markets must be made as competitiv­e as possible to support existing businesses in the Philippine­s as well as to attract new ones,” it added.

The CMTA, one of the priority legislatio­n of the Aquino administra­tion, is pending second reading at the plenary of the House of Representa­tives under House Bill No. 5525. A Senate counterpar­t, under Senate Bill No. 168, is also on the Upper House’s Ways and Means Committee.The JFC said many of the individual reforms in the bill once implemente­d would reduce logistic chain costs and enhance the country’s competitiv­eness, especially with the upcoming integratio­n of the Associatio­n of South East Asian Nations (Asean) by the end of the year.

The measure, it said, would also address smuggling, which results in state revenue losses and deters the proliferat­ion of legitimate businesses. “Aside from the improvemen­t of the current Tariff and Customs Code of the Philippine­s to make it more adaptable to the demands of internatio­nal trading through modernizat­ion, accessibil­ity, and transparen­cy, the passage of the bill is expected to contribute to the ongoing structural reforms at the Bureau of Customs, which the JFC fully supports,” it said.

“As the Philippine­s moves into the AEC (Asean Economic Community)… the corrupt and inefficien­t Bureau of Customs of the past will become unacceptab­le to the country’s regional as well as global trading partners,” the groups said. In addition, the JFC said the passage of the CMTA would bring about the removal of the current de minimis of P10 under Republic Act 1937, which has not been amended since 1957. “At this absurdly low amount, the Philippine de minimis is the smallest in Asean, which averages almost $200 or some 90 times the Philippine amount. Other Asean jurisdicti­ons set this amount administra­tively–as the CMTA would allow - rather than by law,” it said.

The JFC, a coalition of the American, Australian- New Zealand, Canadian, European, Japanese, Korean chambers, has already been calling for the passage of the CMTA since 2013.

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