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Gov’t expects lower taxes amid pandemic

Economic managers lowered their expected collections from the government’s tax reform program this year until 2022 due to slowing demand amid a prolonged lockdown to contain a coronavirus pandemic.

The Development Budget Coordination Committee (DBCC) now expects to raise P171.1 billion, more than a third lower than their original forecast of about P270 billion in average yearly collections from 2019 to 2022, according to a report released on Thursday.

“The prolonged lockdown has led to distortions in the market as economic activity from businesses and service sectors has been abruptly curtailed, including a liquor ban and restrictions on the movement of goods, among others,” the DBCC said in its report.

“The combination of these factors has weakened consumer demand and dampened economic growth, which will translate into a reduced revenue base for the remaining months of 2020 and therefore has reduced revenue collection,” it added.

The DBCC cut projected taxes to P25.7 billion this year, P62.7 billion next year and P82.7 billion in 2022, according to the report. The government collected P134.7 billion from the program last year.

It said estimates for legislated tax policy measures such as the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion law and sin taxes have also been cut to account for the impact of the enhanced community quarantine on consumer demand, particularly for products subject to excise tax.

The latest forecast also considered the P44.6 billion foregone revenue from the passage of a proposed Corporate Recovery and Tax Incentives for Enterprises Act that will cut the corporate income tax to 25% from 30% this year.

The amount could still change depending on the final form of the bill that will be approved by both Houses of Congress, the DBCC said.

The government economic team expected as much as P268.3 billion in yearly taxes from the tax program, based on a fiscal report published in 2018.

The Duterte administration has lowered personal income taxes and raised the excise tax on fuel and other goods such as sweetened beverages and automobiles under its tax reform program. It also enacted measures on tax amnesty and sin taxes that increased the excise taxes on tobacco, electronic cigarettes and alcohol products.

DEFICIT

Last year, its initial tax reform package yielded P130.7 billion in additional revenue that exceeded the P108-billion target by 21%. Two tax amnesty programs generated only P4 billion, or 85% short of the P27.5-billion goal.

Economic managers said suspension of several mining operations and expiration of mining contracts, the temporary closure of major oil refineries as companies imported more finished petroleum products and a presidential decree that granted excise tax-exemption to the country’s largest coal manufacturers have reduced the tax take from the tax reform program.

Revenues generated from the estate tax amnesty last year hit P800 million, while the tax amnesty for delinquent accounts yielded P3.2 billion.

More revenues are expected to be collected as the cut-off periods were extended to May 2021 for estate taxes and to Dec. 31, 2020 for those with delinquent accounts.

Other tax bills pending in Congress are the proposed new tax regime for the mining industry and a measure seeking to streamline taxes on passive income and financial instruments.

Fitch Ratings in a report on Friday said the general government deficit could widen to 7.5% of economic output this year from the 1.2% shortfall last year. The gap is expected to narrow to 6.9% next year and to 5.8% in 2022.

This would translate to a general government debt equivalent to 48% of the economy this year from 34% last year, and roughly 50% by 2022.

“Under these projections the Philippines’ debt will remain below the forecast ‘BBB’ median,” Fitch said. “ Importantly, the Philippines entered the crisis with fiscal space due to its relatively low debt ratio in 2019. In addition, the authorities’ record of macroeconomic management lends credibility to their medium-term consolidation plans.”

The rating company in May affirmed the countrys ‘BBB’ rating and revised its outlook to stable from positive.

Fitch expects the economy to shrink by 8% this year as the coronavirus pandemic remains a threat to economic recovery. Economic managers expect the economy to shrink by 4.5% to 6.6% this year. — Beatrice M. Laforga

BSP raises P120 billion at bill auction

The Philippine central bank raised P120 billion in short-term securities on Friday due to strong demand.

In a notice posted on its website, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) said it had fully awarded the 28-day bills it auctioned off out of total bids worth P129.1 billion.

The auction was the fifth straight time the central bank had fully awarded the debt paper after it started selling its own securities on Sept. 18.

Investors sought rates between 1.85% and 2.25%, wider than 1.84-1.86% at last week’s auction. The debt had an average rate of 1.8956%, 7.56 basis points higher than 1.82% in the previous auction.

“Demand for the BSP bills remained strong amid ample financial liquidity,” central bank Deputy Governor Francisco G. Dakila, Jr. said in a statement..”Looking ahead, the BSP will remain guided by its assessment of recent market developments and liquidity conditions in the further refinement of its monetary operations.”

Large bids at the weekly auctions of both the central bank and Bureau of the Treasury showed that the market remained awash with cash, prompting the BSP to mop it up by increasing its debt offers, Michael L. Ricafort, chief economist at Rizal Commercial Banking Corp., said in a Viber message on Friday.

“However, the 28-day BSP security auction yields have already gone up gradually in recent weeks from unusually low levels, after announcements from the Department of Finance, which signaled preference for commercial borrowings and possibly more borrowings from the BSP by the National Government for 2021,” he added.

The rate of the one-month paper ended at 1.068% on Friday, based on the Bloomberg Valuation Service reference rates published on the Philippine Dealing System’s (PDS) website.

Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III on Wednesday said the National Government might still borrow more from the central bank next year to plug some of its short-term funding requirements.

The government plans to borrow P3 trillion this year to plug its ballooning budget deficit that is expected to hit 9.6% of economic output. — Beatrice M. Laforga

House OKs 2021 budget on final reading

By Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

Congressmen approved the P4.5-trillion national budget for next year on third and final reading in a special session on Friday after days of squabbling over the speakership.

The lawmakers passed the appropriations bill on the last day of the four-day special session called by President Rodrigo R. Duterte, who earlier asked House leaders to prioritize the measure amid a coronavirus pandemic.

The President had certified the bill as urgent to allow congressmen to fast-track the legislative process. Lawmakers approved the bill on third reading moments after passing it on second reading.

The measure allotted P1.1 trillion —  about a quarter of the country’s spending plan — to infrastructure projects to fuel economic recovery amid a coronavirus pandemic.

The Philippine economy shrank by a record 16.5% in the second quarter and is expected to slump by 4.5% to 6.6% this year. 

A copy of the budget bill will be sent to the Senate by Oct. 28, appropriations committee chairman Eric G. Yap told reporters. 

Senators earlier said the Philippine government would probably operate under a re-enacted budget again next year amid the House leadership squabble.

Failure to pass the budget bill on time means the government must use the same amount of funds provided under the P4.1-trillion appropriations for this year during the first quarter of next year.

It also means new government projects will be delayed and some key services will be affected until the new budget measure is signed.

The House had approved the budget bill on second reading after ousted Speaker Alan Peter S. Cayetano, who has rejected a term-sharing deal he agreed to last year, moved to terminate debates and sessions until Nov. 16.

He created a small committee that would consolidate proposed changes during the break. Congress was supposed to suspend sessions on Oct. 17 and resume on Nov. 16 under its legislative calendar.

The suspension did not prevent supporters of Marinduque Rep. Lord Allan Q. Velasco to elect him as Speaker in a rogue session outside the House building this week.

The House during a special session on Tuesday recalled its second-reading approval of the budget bill after 186 congressmen ratified Mr. Velasco’s election as Speaker.

Meanwhile, Budget officials at Friday’s plenary session said P4.071 trillion or about 99.3% of the country’s 2020 spending plan, had been released to various government agencies as of September this year.

Senator Panfilo M. Lacson earlier warned that potential pork-like allocations could make it into the printed budget bill.

Also on Friday, some congressmen raised concerns about the “dangerous” definition of savings under next year’s spending plan.

This could allow government agencies to get away with the original intent of a project that has yet to be committed for payment, Deputy Minority Leader Carlos T. Zarate, who sought changes in the definition, said.

“These will give the President a blank check by the mere declaration of a state of calamity,” he said in a letter to Mr. Yap. “This will practically rob Congress of its constitutional power over the purse.”

Mr. Zarate has also proposed to prevent the Executive branch from channeling declared savings to intelligence funds.

“This representation believes that aside from the already large amount of intelligence funds appropriated in the 2021 General Appropriations bill, intelligence funds should not be augmented from savings, especially when there are more important matters to be given consideration, like the COVID-19 response,” he said.

Agencies that will get the biggest allocations are the Department of the Interior and Local Government with P246.1 billion, Defense department with P209.1 billion, Health department with P204 billion and Social Welfare department with P171.2 billion

The Transportation department will get P143.6 billion, Department of Agriculture will get P66.4 billion, Judiciary will have 43.5 billion and Labor department will get P27.5 billion. 

The education sector will get the lion’s share of the budget worth P754.4 billion.

Lifting exploration ban won’t affect China deal — energy chief

A government decision to resume exploration activities in the South China Sea will not affect its non-binding deal with China to jointly explore gas and oil resources, the country’s energy chief said on Friday.

The unilateral decision was done in good faith and was unlikely to affect joint oil development discussions with China, Energy Secretary Alfonso G. Cusi told an online news briefing. Both countries signed a memo to jointly explore the disputed area two years ago.

“There is no problem with the joint development or the memorandum of understanding that we signed with China,” he said. “It will even help the MOU expedite explorations.”

President Rodrigo R. Duterte on Thursday lifted the moratorium on exploration works in the heavily contested waters. His predecessor Benigno S.C. Aquino III enforced the moratorium in 2014 amid rising tensions between the Philippines and China.

There was no need for the country to inform China about the lifting of the ban, Mr. Cusi said. “I’m sure China will respect our decision.”

But in case China protests, the Philippines must “stand up” for its sovereign and economic rights, he added.

The Philippines in 2016 won an arbitration case against China after a United Nations tribunal rejected China’s historical claim to more than 80% of the South China Sea based on a nine-dash line map.

Manuel V. Pangilinan-led PXP Energy Corp. and state-led Philippine National Oil Co.-Exploration Corp. operate petroleum prospects under so-called service contracts 75 and 59, respectively.

Forum Energy, Ltd., where PXP Energy also has a majority stake, was also allowed to return to its areas under service contract 72. The company is still in talks with China National Oil Offshore Corp. (CNOOC) for a future partnership at Recto Bank, which is projected to bear as much as 3 trillion cubic feet of gas resources.

PXP shares jumped by 49.9% to close at P7.72 each on Friday.

“The lifting of the suspension places the service contractors under legal obligation to put capital into the contract areas and hire Filipino engineers and technical workers to resume exploration,” Mr. Cusi said in a statement on Thursday.

He added that the government had placed military posts around the areas as a security precaution.

The depleting reserves in the country’s sole natural gas reservoir in Malampaya, northwest of Palawan province, prompted Mr. Cusi to advise the President to allow the resumption of gas and oil exploration in the contested waters.

“With the impending depletion of our natural gas reserve in Malampaya, it is the department’s position that there is an urgent imperative to resume exploration, development, and production activities within our exclusive economic zone to ensure continuity of supply of indigenous resources in the country,” he said on Thursday.

The Malampaya gas-to-power project is expected to be depleted by 2027, according to estimates by the Energy department. — Adam J. Ang

COVID-19 infections top 350,000

The Department of Health (DoH) reported 3,139 coronavirus infections on Friday, bringing the total to 351,750.

The death toll rose by 34 to 6,531 while recoveries increased by 786 to 294,865, it said in a bulletin.

There were 50,354 active cases, 84.7% of which were mild, 10.8% did not show symptoms, 1.5% were severe and 3% were critical.

Metro Manila reported the highest number of new cases with 1,003, followed by Cavite with 206, Rizal with 175, Laguna with 138 and Iloilo with 126.

Of the new deaths, seven came from the Caraga region, five from Western Visayas, four from the Bicol region, and three each from Central Luzon, Central Visayas and Soccsksargen, the agency said.

Cagayan Valley and the Calabarzon region reported two deaths each, while Eastern Visayas, Northern Mindanao, Mimaropa, the Cordillera Administrative Region and Metro Manila reported one death each.

More than four million people have been tested for the disease, DoH said.

Meanwhile, the government has “rerouted” virus specimens to other laboratories after the Philippine Red Cross halted coronavirus tests following state insurer Philippine Health Insurance Corp.’s failure to pay for the tests.

Health authorities are in talks with the Red Cross to resolve the problem, Health Undersecretary Maria Rosario S. Vergeire told an online news briefing on Friday.

The local Red Cross on Oct. 14 said it would stop conducting tests chargeable to PhilHealth until it pays about P930 million in overdue debt. — Vann Marlo M. Villegas

Gov’t lifts nonessential travel ban

The government has lifted the ban on nonessential foreign travels by Filipinos starting Oct. 21.

Filipinos leaving the country must submit a copy of their roundtrip tickets and must have adequate travel and health insurance, presidential spokesman Harry L. Roque said in a statement on Friday, citing a decision by an inter-agency task force made up of Cabinet officials.

They should also sign a document acknowledging the risks of travel and must test negative to an Antigen test within 24 hours before their departure, he said.

“Outbound Filipino travelers shall likewise follow the guidelines of the national task force for returning overseas Filipinos,” he said.

Meanwhile, the task force has also allowed travel between areas under a general lockdown and those under a modified general lockdown, Mr. Roque said.

People aged 15 to 65 years may also now leave their homes and go out, he said, citing the body’s decision.

“Local government units may impose a higher age limit for minors, depending on the COVID-19 situation in their respective jurisdictions,” he added.

The task force also asked local governments to exempt workers and people allowed to go out, as well as businesses from their curfews.

It also allowed the Trade department to adjust the operational capacities of businesses and activities allowed in places under a general lockdown.

Malls and business establishments may hold activities, subject to guidelines by the agency, Mr. Roque said. — Vann Marlo M. Villegas

National road projects required to include bike lanes

The Public Works department has prescribed a standard design for bicycle lanes along national highways as public transport remains limited amid a coronavirus pandemic.

National roads and bridges must have a bike facility that is at least 2.44 meters wide, according to an order issued by Public Works Secretary Mark A. Villar.

The policy also covers road and bridge widening projects and diversion and bypass roads, according to the order.

“We aim to promote road safety to all and encourage the public to consider biking as a safe mode of transportation,” Mr. Villar said.

He said biking is good for the health and the environment, cutting greenhouse gas emissions and noise pollution. It also reduces traffic and minimizes the wear and tear on public roads caused by cars.

Under the guidelines, new bike lanes will be set up based on car volume and operating speeds, available road, shoulder and sidewalk space, lane configuration, bicycle demand and other driveway and parking conflicts. — Arjay L. Balinbin

Ill treatment of detainee flagged

The Commission on Human Rights (CHR) has flagged the government’s ill treatment of a detained activist whose child had died while she was in jail.

Accused Reina Mae Nasino is still being tried and “should not be subjected to any cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment,” CHR spokesperson Jacqueline Ann de Guia said in a statement on Friday.

The government has a duty to respect people’s dignity and value as human beings, in line with United Nations standards, she added.

“CHR through its Investigation Office is currently looking into Nasino’s case, also considering that there are allegations that her detention is a form of harassment due to her human rights work,” Ms. de Guia said.

Ms. Nasino, charged with illegally possessing firearms and explosives, was initially given three days to visit her daughter’s wake and burial.

A Manila court later cut her furlough to three hours daily for two days after the jail warden said they did not have enough staff to accompany her.

Kapatid, a support group of family and friends of political prisoners, said the burial of Ms. Nasino’s three-month old daughter had been heavily guarded by police .

The court earlier rejected her plea to be allowed to take care of her daughter at the hospital or prison nursery until she turned a year old.

The human rights commission noted that under United Nations rules for the treatment of women prisoners, decisions to allow children to stay with their mothers in prison should be for the children’s best interest.

“However, until the last moment, three-month-old baby River was kept away from her mother,” it said. — Vann Marlo M. Villegas

PNB plans major asset disposals by year’s end

Philippine National Bank (PNB) said hopes to dispose of underperforming assets, including real estate, this year to raise funds for more lending.

“The real estate we have in the bank should be earning assets, and that’s a priority because it will allow us to… make PNB lend more and do more businesses. We are hopeful that (these transactions) will materialize within the year,” PNB CEO and President Jose Arnulfo A. Veloso said in a virtual briefing Friday.

PNB disclosed to the Philippine Stock Exchange last month that its board approved the plan to dispose of prime properties to improve its financial position.

Bloomberg has reported that the assets include a 10-hectare property along Manila Bay, as well as an office building and a prime lot in Makati financial district.

The bank’s net profit was P52.6 million in the second quarter, down 97.5% from a year earlier.

PNB attributed the decline to increased loan loss provisioning of P8.4 billion in the first half, against P808.8 million a year earlier.

PNB said it considers the economy to be improvinge but will wait for third-quarter results before adjusting loan provisioning over the rest of the year.

“The third quarter has already demonstrated an improvement in terms of economic forecast. I would like to find out how will that continue in the fourth quarter,” Mr. Veloso said.

The bank added the positive forecast indicates “potential” improvement in its provisioning. — Kathryn Kristina T. Jose

Travel agencies, tour operators, mall-wide sales allowed — DTI

The government has allowed travel agencies, tour operators, reservation services and related activities to resume operations at 50% capacity for areas placed under general community quarantine (GCQ) and at 100% capacity for areas placed under the more relaxed form of GCQ, known as modified GCQ, the Trade department said Friday.

The department announced separately that the Inter-Agency Task Force on Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF) has approved its proposal to allow mall-wide sales in areas placed under GCQ and MGCQ. It added that the age range for persons allowed to leave their homes is now 15 to 65, except those in coronavirus hot spots, are also allowed to go out.

The Trade department said the IATF has also directed local government units to start removing or easing their curfew hours to allow essential business establishments to open and their workers to travel within such hours.

But they should not sacrifice the enforcement of health protocols, the department said, noting that the objective is to “generate more jobs and income opportunities.”

As for the travel agencies, tour operators, reservation services and related activities, the Trade department said they are also required to follow the minimum public health standards and protocols set by the government.

The department said feedback and complaints from the general public may be coursed to its consumer care hotline 1-384. — Arjay L. Balinbin

House due to pass bill late Friday granting President power to streamline red tape

The House of Representatives was due to pass on third and final reading late Friday a measure seeking to grant the President powers to reduce red tape during national emergencies such as the current pandemic.

House Bill (HB) No. 7884 was poised to obtain final House approval at deadline time late Friday afternoon after President Rodrigo R. Duterte certified it as urgent, allowing it to skip the three-day waiting period after second-reading approval Thursday night.

Mr. Duterte has repeatedly expressed frustration over the slow workings of the bureaucracy.

The measure gives the President authority to suspend the requirements for national and local permits, certifications, and licenses.

HB 7884 aims to “accelerate and streamline” regulatory processes for new and pending applications and renewals of permits, licenses, clearances, certifications and authorizations in all agencies of the Executive branch.

The measure, however, cannot be used to “undermine the existing procedures and processes, under applicable laws, rules and regulations, meant to protect the environment, especially those that aim to safeguard protected areas and its buffer zones, and environmentally critical areas.”

The bill also grants the President power to suspend or remove any government official or employee violating the proposed law.

The bill is intended to help struggling micro, small and medium enterprises that are “finding it difficult to allocate limited resources to facilitate registration with many different government agencies,” House committee on trade and industry chair Weslie T. Gatchalian told BusinessWorld in a Viber message Friday.

“We recognize the challenges faced by our enterprising countrymen and we want to make their lives easier. We want to help them get registered, legitimized, and operational so that they can once again start earning a living,” he said.

The Senate version of the bill passed on final reading Wednesday. The bill is expected to be approved in bicameral conference by next month. — Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza

ARTA taps private sector network to address red tape, LGU resistance to reforms

THE ANTI-Red Tape Authority (ARTA) and the Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry (PCCI) are putting their partnership into action by tapping the business group’s regional network to address ease of doing business hurdles from local governments.

PCCI Secretary General Ruben J. Pascual said officials of regional chambers will be trained by ARTA starting next week to equip them for setting up systems that will help resolve red tape at the various levels of local government — from barangays to municipalities and cities.

“We will be their (ARTA’s) listening post, early warning system… who will listen from small to big complaints about ease of doing business,” Mr. Pascual said during Friday’s session of the Mindanao Business Conference webinar series.

ARTA and PCCI signed a partnership agreement on Aug. 27 to boost the implementation of Republic Act 11032, or the Ease of Doing Business and Efficient Government Service Delivery Act of 2018.

ARTA Director General Jeremiah B. Belgica noted that under the law, all local governments must have an electronic business one-stop-shop by 2021.

Mr. Belgica, responding to a question posted by BusinessWorld, said the biggest challenge to having such digital facilities is not primarily infrastructure or connectivity, but the “refusal” to improve processes and the “kingdom” mentality among government workers and officials.

“The silo system of operations, the silo system mindset that government agencies have ingested throughout the years that (you have) several kingdoms within one kingdom… I’ll regulate mine, you regulate yours… This is what ARTA is trying to break,” he said.

He said there are “more than 10,000 agencies both at the national and local levels,” not counting the 42,046 barangays, operating within the government bureaucracy.

For shifting into a digital system, Mr. Belgica said local governments must first streamline processes before thinking about adopting technological solutions.

“You cannot automate without first streamlining the process because you end up including the unnecessary requirements in the automated system,” he said.

Mr. Pascual said PCCI itself is undertaking some organizational adjustments for its regional groups to fully implement its role as “ARTA champions.”

“Most important to the private sector, the businessman is by simplifying the processes… it redounds to the lowering of cost of doing business,” he said. — Marifi S. Jara