Lower revenue from Senate tax reform bill may slow down ‘Build, Build, Build’

Ernesto Pernia

Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia (File photo by JOAN BONDOC / Philippine Daily Inquirer)

The Senate version of the first package of the Duterte administration’s comprehensive tax reform program will generate only P59.9 billion in net revenue next year, a meager amount that may defer the rollout of some big-ticket infrastructure projects.

“That could be the logical outcome,” Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia told reporters who asked him about the issue on the sidelines of the opening ceremony of the 28th National Statistics Month.

Pernia is director general of the National Economic and Development Authority (Neda)

The latest preliminary data from Department of Finance, which was released Monday, showed that the estimated total incremental revenues under Senate Bill No. 1592 introduced last month was the lowest compared to the DOF’s original proposal with P157.2 billion, as well as House Bill No. 5636’s P119.4 billion.

The first package, aimed at slashing personal income tax rates while jacking up taxes on consumption, is currently undergoing deliberations in the Senate after it was approved by the House of Representatives in May.

Under the Senate version, the revenues from value-added tax (VAT) were reduced to just P14 billion compared with the DOF’s P89.2 billion and the House’s P60.9 billion, as senators retained the exemptions on cooperatives, electric cooperatives as well as power transmission, among others.

The P40-billion revenues expected from higher oil excise taxes under the Senate bill was also nearly half of gains from the DOF proposal and HB 5636, as the incremental increase would be slower at P1.75, P2 and P2.25 in the next three years compared with the House-approved P3, P2 and P1.

The P37.4 billion in additional revenues from sugar-sweetened beverage tax under SB 1592, which has lower rates of P5 per liter for beverages with caloric sweeteners and P3 for those with non-caloric, was likewise below the DOF proposal of P47 billion and HB 5636’s P52 billion.

Under the proposed 2018 P3.767-trillion national budget, P134 billion would be allocated to be sourced from the first tax reform package.

Comprehensive tax reform was one of the sources of funding to be tapped for the Duterte administration’s ambitious “Build, Build, Build” program aimed at ushering in “the golden age of infrastructure.”

Under the program, the government will rollout 75 flagship, “game-changing” infrastructure projects, with about half of them targeted to be finished within President Rodrigo Duterte’s term, alongside plans to spend a total of up to P9 trillion on hard and modern infrastructure until 2022.

“We’re still hoping that the Senate version will improve and move closer, if not the same level of the House version at least,” Pernia said.

“VAT exemptions really have to be broadened,” he added. “We have to be comparable to our Asean neighbors that really have broad-based VAT [regimes].”

Also, the phasing of the excise on fuel under SB 1592 “needs to be the same as the House[-approved bill],” Pernia added.

/atm

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