The Philippine Star

Infra, tax reform crucial to ‘Dutertenom­ics’

- By CZERIZA VALENCIA

Economic managers are bent on having the Comprehens­ive Tax Reform Program (CTRP) – composed of four packages – raise enough revenues to bankroll the government’s ambitious plan to modernize the country’s infrastruc­ture backbone.

The House of Representa­tives is set to start plenary discussion­s next week on the substitute tax reform bill, which is aimed at lowering personal income tax rates

while broadening the tax base through reform in consumptio­n-related taxes such as value added tax (VAT) and excise taxes on automobile­s, fuel and sugar-sweetened beverages.

The bill also contains the first package of the CTRP.

“Dutertenom­ics is going to be boosted by massive infrastruc­ture spending and tax reform… Tax reform is going to be critical to our infrastruc­ture program and Dutertenom­ics in general,” said Pernia in a presentati­on during the BusinessWo­rld Economic Forum held in Taguig City yesterday.

He described the Duterte administra­tion’s economic From Page 1 growth strategy as one founded on a long-term vision that must be sustained across four administra­tions with accompanyi­ng medium-term developmen­t plans and concrete measures “backed by political will.”

“The hallmark of Dutertenom­ics is regional and rural developmen­t that will reduce inequality and poverty across regions and households. Dutertenom­ics is also about infrastruc­ture projects that will be processed swiftly, implemente­d on schedule and delivered without corruption,” he said.

The government wants to execute a robust pipeline of public works at an unpreceden­ted speed as it plans to spend P8.4 trillion over the next five years to put up vital infrastruc­ture to cope with the country’s economic growth.

For the country’s economic managers, the fastest way to do this is to shift the funding of big-ticket projects to official developmen­t assistance loans and auction the operations and maintenanc­e under the public-private partnershi­p scheme.

“Spending from government appropriat­ions act is faster than through PPP. It takes 29 months to get a PPP project going,” said Pernia in a separate interview.

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 ?? GEREMY PINTOLO ?? Metro Pacific Investment­s Corp. chairman Manuel V. Pangilinan (left) is interviewe­d by reporters during the BusinessWo­rld Economic Forum at Shangri-La at the Fort in Taguig City yesterday. With the theme ‘Fueling Philippine Economic Expansion Beyond 2017: The Engines of Growth,’ the forum (right photo) provided a live platform for industry leaders and key figures in society to discuss and solve key issues and challenges affecting the country. Story on B1.
GEREMY PINTOLO Metro Pacific Investment­s Corp. chairman Manuel V. Pangilinan (left) is interviewe­d by reporters during the BusinessWo­rld Economic Forum at Shangri-La at the Fort in Taguig City yesterday. With the theme ‘Fueling Philippine Economic Expansion Beyond 2017: The Engines of Growth,’ the forum (right photo) provided a live platform for industry leaders and key figures in society to discuss and solve key issues and challenges affecting the country. Story on B1.

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