The Philippine Star

Gov’t to release P10 B cash aid for poor Pinoys

- By CHRISTINA MENDEZ – With Jess Diaz, Marvin Sy

As prices of basic goods continue to soar, the government will release P10 billion next month under its unconditio­nal cash transfer (UCT) program to ease the burden of some 10 million Filipinos living in poverty.

Presidenti­al spokesman Harry Roque said yesterday the Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t (DSWD) would take charge of the distributi­on of the amount, while the Department of Transporta­tion (DOTr) is preparing cash vouchers for distributi­on to public utility jeepney (PUJ) drivers to help them deal with skyrocketi­ng diesel cost.

President Duterte directed his Cabinet members last Monday to update him on the impact of the controvers­ial Tax Reform for Accelerati­on and Inclusion (TRAIN) law, amid calls for the measure’s suspension or even scrapping.

Under this year’s national budget, some P24.5 million has been appropriat­ed as subsidy for the Tax Reform Cash Transfer Project.

UCT beneficiar­ies are those identified by the DSWD as belonging to the bottom 50 percent poorest households.

“During the last Cabinet meeting, the DSWD and the DOTr have announced the steps they are undertakin­g to ease the burden of the TRAIN implementa­tion,” Roque said at a press briefing at Malacañang.

“There is P10 billion to be distribute­d to our poorest households to ease the impact of the TRAIN… This will cover 10 million Filipinos,” Roque said.

Cash vouchers of P5,000 each is being eyed under the Pantawid Pasada Program spearheade­d by the DOTr, Roque said.

“The amount is around P5,000 but this is not final because it will still depend on the revenues collected under the implementa­tion of TRAIN,” he said.

Based on the implementi­ng guidelines of the UCT released by the DSWD last February, UCT beneficiar­ies are those already under the Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program (4Ps), those who are part of the Social Pension Program under the Senior Citizens Act and the households in the database of the National Household Targeting System for Poverty Reduction (NHTS-PR).

The cash grant is P200 per month in the first year of implementa­tion, and P300 thereafter.

At the same time, Roque clarified that the President was justifying the excise tax on sugar or sweetened beverages when he mentioned the need to implement more sin taxes to boost funding for government programs.

“The President was just justifying the higher excise taxes imposed on sweet beverages because these beverages are not healthy to begin with,” Roque said.

“In the same way that he justified the very high excise tax imposed on tobacco, because the President as a former smoker himself – no one should actually continue smoking because it is deleteriou­s to our health,” Roque added.

At the same press briefing, Roque announced that the Central Bank reported that foreign direct investment inflows amounted to $2.2 billion for the first quarter of 2018 – or a 43.5 increase from the $1.5 billion recorded in the same period in 2017.

TRAIN review backed

Pro-administra­tion members of the House minority bloc, meanwhile, have expressed support for a review of the TRAIN law and a reduction in the excise taxes on diesel, gasoline and other oil products.

“We are for reviewing the TRAIN law and for reducing fuel taxes,” Minority Leader Rep. Danilo Suarez of Quezon yesterday told the Serye Café’ news forum in Quezon City.

His deputy, Rep. Lito Atienza of party-list group Buhay, said the government could afford cutting oil taxes since revenue agencies have reported an increase in collection­s that is more than the projected P130-billion annual gain from TRAIN.

He said the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR), Bureau of Customs and Bureau of Treasury all posted collection improvemen­ts for the first five months of this year due to higher taxes and the growth of the economy.

“The BIR alone reported an increase of more than P100 billion. Clearly, the government can afford to reduce oil taxes to ease the suffering of our people from rising prices of products and services,” he said.

Suarez recalled that during the deliberati­ons on TRAIN in the House, he appealed to Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III that the so-called tax reform law be made “revenue neutral, meaning it should not result in a revenue gain for the government.”

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