Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III on Thursday unveiled
details of the planned and much-awaited tax amnesty program aimed at
shoring up revenues to fund the massive infrastructure projects to be
rolled out by the Duterte administration.
“This year, we hope to improve further our revenue collections with a
proposed tax amnesty program. The program will help clear the dockets
as well as enable the transfer of stranded real properties so that they
can be made economically useful,” Dominguez said in a speech before the
Rotary Club of Manila.
“In particular, we propose an estate tax amnesty where the government
collects only 6 percent of the net undeclared estate tax for those who
died prior to January 1, 2018,” Dominguez said.
He noted that estate tax used to be a higher 20 percent.
Also, the Department of Finance was “proposing a general tax amnesty
on all unpaid internal revenue taxes excluding internal revenue taxes
arising from importation and customs duties,” Dominguez added.
The Finance chief said that they also wanted to offer amnesty on tax
delinquencies, at a rate of 50 percent on the basic tax, excluding
interest charges and surcharges.
“For those already facing criminal cases in court, we are proposing a rate of 80 percent of the basic tax only,” he added.
Dominguez earlier said that the government was eyeing to implement
the much-awaited tax amnesty by April next year to coincide with the
deadline of filing income tax returns.
Tax amnesty forms part of tax reform package “1B,” an off-shoot of
the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN) Act signed by
President Duterte last December.
Besides general tax amnesty, package 1B also includes estate tax
amnesty, higher motor vehicle user’s charge, bank secrecy relaxation and
automatic exchange of information.
Tax package 1B was a result of the Senate’s removal of the tax
administration measures from the original first tax reform package
passed by the Lower House last year under House Bill No. 5636.
Once package 1B is passed, it will add about P40 billion in revenues.
The DOF was optimistic that the tax reform package 1B will be passed by Congress in the third quarter.
Dominguez said that another reform that the DOF proposes was to treat value-added tax (VAT) as “purely a consumption tax.”
“As such, it will be collected at the point of consumption or sale,
and it will be refunded when the consumption is done outside the
Philippines. VAT exemptions should not be granted as investments
incentives,” he said.
In general, “the tax reform program will assure us of sufficient
revenues to fund the infrastructure modernization and expand social
services,” Dominguez said.
“Thirty percent of incremental revenues generated from the tax reform
law will go to pay for social services. There will be larger allotments
for improving public health, upgrading our educational system and
providing conditional cash assistance for the poorest of the poor. This,
after all, is what modern governments are about: looking after the
welfare of its people and providing them effective protection.
Meanwhile, about 70 percent of the revenues raised from the new law will
be directed to infrastructure modernization,” the Finance chief said.
Besides the TRAIN Law, up to five more tax packages, including
pending legislation on corporate income taxation reform coupled with the
rationalization of fiscal incentives, will be pursued by the Duterte
administration.
source: Philippine Daily Inquirer
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