QUEZON CITY (PIA) -- Finance Secretary Benjamin Diokno has committed to pursue the passage, in the incoming 19th Congress, of the previous administration’s remaining tax reform packages on improving real property valuation and simplifying financial taxation.
One of these is the Duterte Administration’s comprehensive tax reform program (CTRP). Secretary Diokno said the Department of Finance (DOF) will continue to push for these “revenue-neutral” measures.
“We won’t collect additional revenues from that, but it will simplify the tax system a lot,” Secretary Diokno said.
“So, we will push for that and then we expect that it could be approved before the end of the year and that (it) would be implemented next year,” he added.
Secretary Diokno is referring to the reforms in real property valuation, which aims to broaden the tax base used for property and property-related taxes of the national and local governments and make these on par with international standards; and the proposed Passive Income and Financial Intermediary Taxation Act (PIFITA), which seeks to simplify the taxation of passive income, financial services, and transactions.
Reforming the real property valuation system will improve the tax collections of the local government units (LGUs) without increasing the existing tax rates or imposing new taxes. The reforms will make property valuation transparent, reliable, and attuned to market developments.
The PIFITA, on the other hand, will reduce the number of tax rates in the financial sector to help make the country more competitive in attracting capital and investments that are urgently needed to fund large-scale infrastructure projects, create more and better jobs, and boost economic growth
Under the administration of former President Rodrigo Duterte, DOF was able to successfully work on the congressional passage and implementation of several packages of the CTRP.
These include the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion Act (TRAIN) and the Corporate Recovery and Tax Incentives for Enterprises (CREATE) law, which significantly reduced income taxes for individuals and corporations, respectively.
The Tax Amnesty Act and the increase in the taxes on sin products such as cigarettes, alcoholic beverages, e-cigarettes, and vapor products were also passed under the Duterte administration.
Maoreover, Secretary Diokno said that he will also support measures to tax digital services and transactions to ensure that the country’s tax system remains fair and equitable.
“Iyong tax on digital services, I think it’s only fair na dapat ita-tax natin iyon, hindi ba? Kasi if you're going to buy from the regular stores, nagta-tax ka. Bakit naman kapag digital hindi ka magta-tax?” Secretary Diokno said during a recent press briefing in Malacañan Palace.
(Translation: The tax on digital services, I think it’s only fair that we tax these, isn’t it? If you’re going to buy from regular stores, the government taxes them. Then why is it that when it comes to digital [transactions], you won’t impose taxes?) (DOF/PIA-NCR)