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RCBC partners with KB Kookmin Bank

RIZAL Commercial Banking Corp. (RCBC) has partnered with KB Kookmin Bank Korea, which will provide banking services and financial information assistance to Korean and Philippine firms.
In a statement sent to reporters on Monday, the Yuchengco-led RCBC said it signed a business cooperation agreement with Kookmin Bank last Sept. 20 to “provide high-quality financial services to corporate customers of both countries by adopting customer tie-up program.”
“This business cooperation will provide high-quality products and services to corporate customers of both banks,” the statement read.
According to the agreement, both banks will establish “mutual cooperation for maintaining and increasing corporate customer base,” among others.
Kookmin Bank is the leading commercial bank in South Korea in asset terms. Founded in 1963, Kookmin Bank has 23 global networks in 10 countries, including branches in New York, Tokyo, Beijing and Hong Kong. However, the Korean lender has no presence in the country.
RCBC has a “strong and long-established relationship” with South Korean firms since it started deals with Korean garment and shoe companies in Bataan in late-1970s.
In 2014, the local lender established the Korean Business Relationship Office as more Korean firms wish to expand their businesses in the Philippines.
Aside from its tie-up with the Korean bank, RCBC also partnered with Japanese regional banks Kansai Urban Banking Corp. and Minato Bank in May to help small and mid-size Japanese firms penetrate the domestic market.
RCBC posted a P2.2-billion net income in the first half of the year, down 6.4% from the P2.35 billion logged a year ago due to lower trading gains.
Shares in RCBC closed unchanged at P25.50 apiece on Monday. — KANV

Regus introduces new membership scheme

GLOBAL WORKSPACE provider Regus has announced a new membership scheme catering to the different working needs of businesses and individuals. In a statement, Regus said it offers three options to its members: Lounge, Co-working and Office space. With Lounge, a member can have access to any Regus business lounge. For Co-working, a member will have access to the business lounge and co-working spaces, while the Office membership also includes access to office rentals. “The new membership scheme makes it easier for anybody to enjoy the benefits of flexible working. All members also enjoy unrivalled access to around 3,500 locations in over 1,100 towns and cities in 120 countries around the world, all for a starting price of just P4,990 per month,” Regus said. Aside from the workspaces, private offices and meeting rooms, each Regus location has secure, high-speed WiFi; onsite administrative and reception support; and a kitchen area.

How PSEi member stocks performed — October 8, 2018

Here’s a quick glance at how PSEi stocks fared on Monday, October 8, 2018.

 
Philippine Stock Exchange’s most active stocks by value turnover — October 8, 2018

The Philippines improves in shipping connectivity scorecard, among biggest in tonnage

The Philippines improves in shipping connectivity scorecard, among biggest in tonnage

SRP for rice expected to be in place by late Oct.

By Reicelene Joy N. Ignacio
GOVERNMENT agencies will implement a suggested retail price (SRP) for all varieties of rice starting the last week of October, Agriculture Secretary Emmanuel F. Piñol said on Monday.
“By the last week of October, the DA (Department of Agriculture), DTI (Department of Trade and Industry) and the NFA (National Food Authority) will implement an SRP program for rice. The price range will be determined in a meeting to be held on Oct. 18 with stakeholders, millers and farmers,” Mr. Piñol told reporters after his meeting with the NFA Council.
The agreed SRPs are: P39 per kilogram for regular-milled rice, P42 for well-milled rice, and P44 for long-grain rice. The SRP is subject to seasonal adjustment.
Mr. Piñol also said all retailers of rice are required to sell four varieties, which must be clearly labeled.
“Last week of October, all rice sold in retail outlets will be properly identified as local rice or imported rice. There will only be four classifications: regular well-milled, well-milled, whole grain head rice, and special rice. Under these classifications, the retailer would classify the rice variety, but we will not anymore do branding of rice, like Sinandomeng, like Dinorado. We believe this will put everything in order in the rice supply chain,” Mr. Piñol said.
“There is no such thing as Sinandomeng. On the Dinorado, that will have to be classified as special rice. The imported rice will be classified as imported rice and should not be priced higher than the local rice,” he added.
Mr. Piñol said that the NFA will not regulate the price of special rice which includes brown rice and organic rice, as this would be determined by the sellers.
The Philippine Rice Research Institute also developed RC160, which Mr. Piñol said he hopes to be classified under special rice, and can be sold at P25 per kilo.
Mr. Piñol also said that these rice varieties should be sold in sealed packets and not in open boxes by the middle of 2019, with each pack having a label which indicates the classification, date of harvest, date of milling, the producer, and the miller.
The label should also bear the logos of DA, NFA and DTI, and indicate that the rice conforms to the quality standards set by the three agencies.
“This is for food safety and traceability,” Mr. Piñol said.

Businesses issue urgent call to build new power plants

By Victor V. Saulon
Sub-Editor
THE Federation of Philippine Industries (FPI) has called for the “immediate” construction of new power plants to ensure ample long-term supply of electricity while the government embarks on its massive infrastructure program.
“We want the power industry to step up and do something, so we can prevent a potential problem on electricity supply,” said FPI Chairman Jesus L. Arranza in a statement on Monday.
The federation, which counts as members 34 industry associations and 120 corporations in the manufacturing sector, called on the power industry to work together to ensure electricity supply and prices will not be an added burden to consumers.
Its call is addressed to the Department of Energy (DoE), the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) and private companies. The move comes amid concerns on supply and increasing prices of basic consumer goods and commodities, it said.
FPI also pointed out that most of the power plants in the country are ageing or around 15 years old or older, making them prone to unscheduled shutdowns. It questioned the motives of groups that “consistently block and oppose the construction of new power projects amid concerns on unnecessary delays that many projects are experiencing.”
The federation cited the planned 1,200-megawatt (MW) coal-fired power project of Atimonan One Energy, Inc., which has yet to start construction as it awaits regulatory approvals. It said power plants of that scale take around four to five years to build.
“The Atimonan project is an example of a very significant power project that can ensure supply availability in the future,” Mr. Arranza said.
The project is one of seven power plants with which distribution utility Manila Electric Co. (Meralco) entered into a power supply agreement (PSA) on April 29, 2016, or just before the extended deadline set by the ERC.
After the deadline, companies are required to first undergo a competitive selection process or CSP, which subjects a PSA to price challengers. Some sectors questioned the ERC’s extended deadline, leaving projects with a total capacity of 3,551 MW stalled ahead of the resolution of cases before the court.
Agnes T. Devanadera, ERC chairperson and chief executive officer, said the commission was working on eliminating its backlog of 480 cases, but the seven PSAs had been awaiting resolution at the Supreme Court.
“The seven PSAs are not just pending before the Supreme Court but the division endorsed [them] to the en banc, meaning all the entire Supreme Court will hear the case instead of a division of five or seven,” she said in an interview last week.
“We tried to look for a consensus in the commission and it appears that since [the cases are] now being heard at the en banc we might as well wait for it,” she added.
“It’s a collegial body and I cannot just decide singly,” she said.
Ms. Devanadera said that were it not for the court case, the commission would have been free to process the PSAs, which previously met with delays at the ERC with the suspension of four commissioners. Rate-setting cases require a majority vote of the commission.
The ERC will this week have a full complement of five commissioners plus its chairperson as the suspension ends, which also comes after the appointment of two new commissioners as replacements for those who retired.
Separately, the DoE said on Monday that it was rolling out energy projects in Mindanao with the holding of a forum that would present the investment opportunities in the region.
“The forum aims to present opportunities and updates on energy developments, which include the one-grid interconnection project and the establishment of additional power capacities in the area,” the DoE said in a statement.
The DoE said it aims to “bridge investors with financing facilities available for energy projects, concerned government institutions and the business sector for knowledge sharing on the industry’s best practices in the region.”
It earlier certified the Atimonan project as an energy project of national significance, a policy establishing a simplified approval process while harmonizing the relevant rules and regulations of government agencies involved in the permitting process.

Philippines, Japan sign loan deal for New Bohol Airport expansion

THE PHILIPPINE and Japanese governments signed on Monday the supplemental loan agreement for the ongoing New Bohol Airport expansion project on Panglao Island.
“This supplemental loan will cover the extension of the runway from 2,000 meters to 2,500 meters. This will enable the airport to accommodate large commercial aircraft,” Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III said during the signing ceremony.
Mr. Dominguez also said the loan also covers expansion of the passenger terminal building from 8,500 square meters to 13,300 square meters.
“This anticipates problems of congestion that may arise as tourism traffic in the area will rise quickly in the near future,” he said.
The loan, coursed through the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), consists of P2.1-billion at 0.1% interest for non-consulting services and 0.01% for consulting services, payable over 40 years with a 12-year grace period.
A separate statement from the Department of Transportation said that the loan “finances the re-measurement of quantities and updating of cost of new/additional equipment for the New Bohol Airport Project due to revised scope and the effect of foreign exchange rate between the peso and yen.”
The airport will be upgraded to handle regional flights within the Asia-Pacific, replacing the old Tagbilaran airport, which only hosts domestic flights.
The airport is expected to accommodate about two million passengers annually, compared to 800,000 for Tagbilaran airport.
“The New Bohol airport will be the primary gateway to the province. This will accommodate the rapidly growing number of tourists to accelerate the economic growth of Bohol and contribute to its transformation as another key economic center in the region,” JICA Chief Representative Yoshio Wada said.
Work on the New Bohol Airport began in June 2015, and is expected to be fully operational by November, according to Mr. Dominguez.
Transportation Secretary Arthur P. Tugade meanwhile said that when he took over the project from the previous administration, the progress of construction was about 5%.
“There was some improvement in the accelerated pace in construction,” he said, noting that the initial 2021 completion target was “too long.”
Mr. Tugade said the department will extend the runway further to 2,800 meters in 2019, including the construction of a cargo terminal building, parallel taxiway, and a fuel depot.
Aboitiz InfraCapital, Inc. (AIC) last month was named original proponent for the airport’s operations and maintenance contract.
Mr. Dominguez said that the New Bohol Airport is “a perfect example” of its a hybrid Public-Private Partnership (PPP) financing mode, where the government or official development assistance takes over the initial phase of the project and later bids out its operations and maintenance to the private sector.
“Basically the asset is financed with a very soft loan, and the private sector cannot match that. By getting a low loan amount we are making sure that the public is going to be served properly and they are not going to pay a very high premium, and we can do it faster,” he said.
“If some future government or some future administration needs money, they can actually sell that asset. So while we can get good financing, we are building up our asset base. That’s like the savings of the people which can be tapped if some future administration needs it,” he added.
He said that the government is looking to redevelop the told airport via a possible joint venture with the private sector.
“Tagbilaran we are thinking of maintaining for general aviation or real estate development. That’s another asset that we have we can go in a joint venture,” he said. — Elijah Joseph C. Tubayan

Internet lobby wants tweaks to rules limiting cell-tower players

INTERNET advocacy group Better Broadband Alliance (BBA) said the draft rules limiting the proposed cell-tower industry to two companies should include performance commitments.
In a letter to Department of Information and Communications Technology (DICT) Acting Secretary Eliseo M. Rio, Jr. distributed to reporters on Monday, the BBA said the two-company limit in the first four years should come with guarantees on the extent of tower coverage.
It said these guarantees should include minimum tower deployment based on the network rollout plans of mobile network operators, small telcos and broadband service providers.
“While the BBA is aware that several (tower companies) operate in other countries (such as India, Indonesia, and Myanmar), and while we initially preferred an open market approach, we also recognize the local context-the high learning curve, risks, and difficulties that both the government and investors will have to contend with, as the Philippines shifts to common towers for the first time,” it said.
The DICT’s draft policy on telco infrastructure sharing, which restricted tower companies to two, was met with criticism from prospective tower companies and network providers when presented at a public hearing last month.
Representatives from Globe Telecoms, Inc. and Telenor Group, American Tower Corp. and Frontier Tower Associates aired concerns that setting the two-company restriction may not be effective in speeding up the deployment of towers.
But the BBA said given the transition from past practice of allowing telcos to set up their own towers to registering independent tower companies, it might be best for the government to “be given the leeway to offer incentives to potential investors and to set standards and rollout obligations in exchange for exclusivity, in order to achieve the objectives of expanding coverage at the soonest possible time.”
It noted, however, that the government must allow an unlimited number of tower companies to come in after the four-year trial period.
The BBA also raised the importance of selecting tower companies that will ensure improved services in unserved and underserved areas. It recommended that the government should start allowing other tower companies to come in if the registered ones “show little indication of rolling out in underserved and unserved areas.”
Another point raised by the BBA is the need to include small telcos and broadband service providers in the companies that will submit roll-out plans from which tower companies will base their commitments.
“While it is assumed that the primary clients of the towercos and pole owners will be (Globe and Smart Communications, Inc.), shared infrastructure should also, and more importantly, serve the small players and broadband service providers whose deployments have been limited to date due to the absence of support infrastructure, such as towers and poles, which, on their own, the small players cannot build and operate,” it said.
The BBA added, the policy must add more details on pole sharing policy and disaster resiliency of the infrastructure to be built. It also said the government must consider sustainability of the common towers and poles, and called for provisions that will address expediting the permit process and passing the Open Access Bill at the Senate.
Mr. Rio previously said the DICT plans to finalize the infrastructure sharing policy by November, in time for the entry of the third telecommunications industry player. — Denise A. Valdez

Online job recruitment rises 18% in Aug. — Monster.com

ONLINE recruitment activity in the Philippines grew 18% year-on-year in August, with most industries showing double-digit growth, research firm Monster.com said.
According to the company, which measures online hiring via its Monster Employment Index (MEI), retail hiring had the highest growth in August at 40%, followed by health care (33%), logistics (27%), banking, financial services and insurance (21%), consumer goods (18%), advertising (16%), manufacturing (12%), and engineering (10%).
Hiring activity in the business process outsourcing (BPO) industry was flat while education was the only sector posting a decline, at 3%.
Monster added: “Online hiring seems on a roll in the Philippines, with positive growth numbers in 9 out of 10 job roles monitored by the MEI.”
By occupational area, purchasing/logistics/supply chain jobs grew 38%, followed by sales and business development, health care and human resources and administration, which grew 32% each.
Other occupations posting growth were finance and accounts(31%), software (22%), marketing and communications (18%), hospitality (15%), and engineering (11%).
The one occupational category posting a decline was customer service, down by 1%.
“Infrastructure is the backbone of a country’s economic development. A McKinsey Global Institute study predicts the Philippine economy is set to rise again and will achieve sustained growth over the next decade. The (International Monetary Fund), too, retained its growth forecast of 6.7% for the country. In line with this optimistic outlook, the MEI has reported an uptick in the demand for talent in Logistics and Supply Chains. This can be attributed to the fast-changing infrastructural landscape of the economy which is likely creating more jobs,” said Abhijeet Mukherjee, CEO of Monster.com for the Asia-Pacific and Middle East.
“While the medium-term outlook may be positive, the labor market can be exposed to domestic risks and vulnerabilities as a consequence of market irregularities and structural changes. The government’s Build, Build, Build campaign is looking to pave the way for a new era of growth and prosperity in the Philippines,” he added. — Vincent Mariel P. Galang

House panel approves mining royalty bill based on margins

THE House Ways and Means Committee approved on Monday a substitute bill imposing a variable royalty on mining margins of 1-5% for firms outside designated mineral reservations, softening the Department of Finance’s (DoF) draft bill which had called for a 5% royalty on gross output on miners everywhere.
The committee agreed on royalties of 1 to 5% based on margins for firms operating off-reservation. Within these areas, the royalty is 3% of gross outputs.
“This is for (the mining industry’s) benefit. Actually it’s a win-win because we’re getting revenue for the government even if we change the basis of computation to margin-based from gross output,” committee chair Estrellita B. Suansing of the first district of Nueva Ecija told BusinessWorld in an interview, Monday.
The bill sets the royalty for firms outside mineral reservations to 1% for margins of between 1 and 10%; 1.50% for margins above 10% to 20%; 2% for margins above 20% to 30%; 2.5% for margins above 30% to 40%; 3% for margins above 40% to 50%; 3.5% for margins above 50% to 60%; 4% for margins above 60% to 70% and 5% for margins above 70%.
The royalty will be imposed on top of all other taxes, such as the 4% excise tax, the royalty to Indigenous People, and an average 1.7% local business tax among others.
The current system only imposes the 5% royalty on mining firms within mineral reservations. The enactment of the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN) law also resulted in the increase of the 2% excise tax to 4%.
Ms. Suansing said the bill also deters miners from loading up on debt by disallowing the deduction of interest expense beyond certain indebtedness levels, with the threshold set at a 3:1 debt to equity ratio.
The bill will also cover small-scale miners within and outside mineral reserves, who will be made to pay a royalty amounting to 1/10 of 1% of gross output.
The substitute bill also proposed a surcharge that will be paid by miners engaging in open-pit mining, but this was later omitted during the deliberation.
“I would like to respectfully seek clarification, perhaps appeal that it be reconsidered, because it will penalize, it will prohibit an existing extraction method that is currently allowed,” Sagittarius Mines, Inc. President Joaquin C. Lagonera told the panel, which agreed to delete the provision upon consultation with Speaker Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo who was also present during the deliberations.
In a separate development, the House on Monday passed on third and final reading the bill exempting small-scale miners from tax on gold sales to the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas.
With 192 affirmative votes, 4 negatives and 1 abstention, the chamber approved House Bill 3297, which will exempt small scale miners from the current 2% excise tax and 5% creditable withholding tax. — Charmaine A. Tadalan

Employers, unions stake out negotiating positions ahead of NCR minimum wage hearing

THE Employers Confederation of the Philippines (ECOP) warned that a minimum wage increase will only benefit about 7-8% of the work force and subject them to a greater risk of layoffs from small firms that cannot afford to pay higher salaries.
The organization issued the warning after the Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP) said it will push for a P320 increase in the minimum wage in the National Capital Region for private-sector workers.
ECoP Acting President Sergio R. Ortiz-Luis, Jr. said in a phone interview with BusinessWorld that only 7 to 8% of the 43 million people in the labor force are minimum-wage earners and a P320 wage increase will not be beneficial to most workers since they are not covered by the wage adjustment.
“If you file for a P320 increase a day, assuming it gets approved, it means the 93% won’t have higher salaries,” Mr.Ortiz-Luis said.
Mr. Ortiz-Luis also said that most companies are Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises which may not be able to deal with wage increases of the magnitude being proposed, while also raising the possibility of strengthening inflation.
“Small companies only have two choices when there is a wage increase. If they can raise prices they will, and that causes inflation. If they cannot, they will reduce their personnel,” he said.
In a message to BusinessWorld on Monday, Associated Labor Unions (ALU)-TUCP Spokesperson Alan A. Tanjusay said TUCP filed a wage hike petition in June with the Regional Tripartite Wage and Productivity Board (RTWPB) for P320, which if granted will push the current daily wage in NCR to a little over P800.
“We filed for P320 to add to the current wage rate and push the current rate to P800. NEDA (National Economic and Development Authority) said the amount needed by a family of five to live decently in one day is P1,400. To get near this P1,400, we deemed it pragmatic and affordable for employers to set the wage at P800 level,” Mr. Tanjusay said.
NEDA Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia was quoted in June as saying that a family of five needs P42,000 a month in order to maintain a standard of living deemed “decent,” which is approximately P1,400 a day.
Also in June, ECoP put forward a motion to dismiss TUCP’s wage hike petition at the NCR-RTWPB because TUCP filed it less than 12 months since the NCR’s last wage order.
Wage boards can only entertain wage petitions after a region’s wage order hits its one-year mark. The NCR’s last wage order took effect on Oct. 5, 2017, bringing the NCR daily minimum wage to P475 for agricultural and P512 for non-agricultural workers.
TUCP President Raymond C. Mendoza said in a statement on Monday that the union will meet with President Rodrigo R. Duterte on Oct. 9 to discuss how to address the impact of inflation on workers.
“If given a chance, we will urge President Duterte to act on the TUCP P320 wage increase across the board bill filed at the House of Representatives and order the regional wage board to adjust the minimum wage rates of minimum wage earners nationwide,” he said.
Special Assistant to the President Christopher Lawrence T. Go said in a message to reporters that there is no confirmed meeting with TUCP.
“There is no meeting with TUCP,” he said.
Mr. Mendoza, who is also the TUCP Partylist Representative at the House of Representatives, filed House Bill 7805 or “The Living Wage Act of 2018” which provides a P320 wage increase in all regions.
Last month, Department of Labor and Employment (DoLE) secretary Silvestre H. Bello III estimated that the wage adjustment for the NCR will be at least P20.
Mr. Tanjusay said that TUCP’s counter-offer won’t go below P80, adding “Employers are haggling for a P20 wage hike. Our counter offer is that we will not accept the P20. Our final counter offer is P80.”
When asked why TUCP will settle for a minimum of an P80 wage adjustment, Mr. Tanjusay said, “This is the amount in our computation that small enterprises can afford to give to workers.”
IBON Foundation Executive Director Sonny A. Africa said in a briefing on Monday that he prefers a P27 wage increase for minimum wage earners if the minimum wage is to retain the value it had when the year started.
“We think that the population, in order to cope with the high prices since the start of this year, should have a P27 wage hike so that the value of the minimum wage will be restored,” Mr. Africa said.
NCR-RTWPB Workers Representative German N. Pascua Jr., a lawyer, said in a mobile message to BusinessWorld that the board will have a consultation with the labor sector on Oct. 22 and the business sector on Oct. 24.
“Public hearing (will be on Oct.) 26,” he added, saying both labor and management sectors will be present at the hearing.
Section 3 of Republic Act 6727 or “Wage Rationalization Act.” states that a regional wage board “shall conduct public hearings and consultations giving notices to employees’ and employers’ groups, provincial, city and municipal officials and other interested parties” during the process of wage fixing. — Gillian M. Cortez

E-invoicing, electronic sales reporting… and the lottery?

About a month ago, House Bill No. 8083 or Tax Reform for Attracting Better and High-quality Opportunities (TRABAHO) was passed on to the Senate. Discussions of its provisions are undeniably necessary so that the Philippines does not end up with hasty-implemented rules that may produce unintended consequences.
Perhaps one of the least talked about, yet highly challenging, provisions of the TRABAHO Bill is the move towards mandatory electronic invoicing and sales reporting.
This initiative was initially introduced in the first package of the comprehensive tax reform program, also known as the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN) Law. The TRAIN Law mandated taxpayers engaged in exporting goods and services, taxpayers engaged in e-commerce, and taxpayers under the jurisdiction of the Large Taxpayers Service to issue electronic receipts or invoices, in lieu of manual receipts. Moreover, they are also required to electronically report their sales data to the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) through the use of electronic point of sales systems.
Sections 17 and 18 of the TRABAHO Bill discuss the same requirements with additional provisions on transmitting electronic receipts or invoices through designated electronic channels with a public certification system accredited by the BIR. As a security measure, digital signatures, electronic tax transaction numbers, and the like are to be put in place to verify the identity of the issuing taxpayer, as well as to verify the information in the invoices. Similar with manual invoices, digital records are also required to be kept and maintained for three years from the close of the taxable year in which they were issued.
Simply put, these taxpayers are required to use a system that is capable of issuing electronic receipts or invoices, collecting transaction records, and transmitting these records to the BIR. Within five years of the Bill being passed into law, and upon establishment of a system capable of storing and processing the required data, the concerned stakeholders are expected to have complied.
The premise is that this system will simplify and speed up not only business transactions but the tax administration procedures of the government as well. Essentially, in an electronic invoicing and sales reporting system, both the issuer and the recipient of the invoice can access and review the invoices generated. On the other hand, tax authorities are also able to collect and analyze the electronically transmitted data in real time.
Consumer behavior nowadays leans towards whatever is the most convenient; suppliers or service providers are also inclined to transact business in the medium of their customers’ choice. The less time spent on processing purchase orders, correcting errors, and filing and archiving paper invoices, the more time and resources can be spent on improving the business and its people. In addition, e-invoicing is a good business practice in terms of environmental sustainability. Although printing one less paper invoice may not clean up the Pasig River, digitizing millions of paper receipts has a significant impact.
As convenient as it may sound, what this regulation also means for businesses, as well as for the government, is an additional expenditure. Setting up, operating, and maintaining an electronic invoicing and sales reporting system will require a huge amount of capital, let alone the tedious approval process required before its implementation. Presently, the Computerized Accounting System (CAS) registration takes several months before it can be approved.
Fortunately, the proposed TRABAHO Bill provides tax incentives to mitigate the cost of transitioning towards e-invoicing. From the first to the fourth year of the implementation period, a taxpayer who adopts the required system shall be granted a tax credit of 0.1% of the purchase value for every electronic receipt or invoice transmitted through the designated electronic channels and issued with an electronic tax transaction number.
In support of electronic sales reporting systems, the BIR may grant allowable deductions equivalent to 10% of the amount of every electronically traceable payment (ETP) made. ETPs refer to payments through debit or credit cards or other methods that may link the specific payment to its payer.
The BIR also has the authority to establish a receipt and invoice lottery program. In Taiwan, for example, each invoice is tagged with a unique government-issued lottery number, which is then used as the basis for a regular draw. This kind of positive reinforcement in the tax system is actually gaining popularity in several countries as a way to increase sales tax collection and to encourage businesses to truthfully report income and pay taxes. Should the Philippines have something like this, one can only hope that the jackpot prize goes as high up as P800 million.
Electronic invoicing, electronic sales reporting, and perhaps even an invoice-based lottery are opportunities for improving the processes in the Philippine tax system; however, these can only be achieved through the cooperation of taxpayers, tax administrators, and lawmakers altogether.
 
Mica Dyan T. Borja is a senior of the Tax Advisory and Compliance of P&A Grant Thornton. P&A Grant Thornton is one of the leading audit, tax, advisory, and outsourcing services firms in the Philippines.
Mica.Borja@ph.gt.com
+63(2) 988-2288.

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