Biz chafes at LGUs’ ECQ rules
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By Elijah Felice Rosales
F
EARING that a martial rulelike lockdown will further obstruct the flow of goods, the Philippine Economic Zone Authority (Peza) has appealed for the integration of quarantine rules instead to improve the fight against the coronavirus pandemic. Peza Director General Charito B. Plaza on Tuesday asked the Interagency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF) to synchronize its rules and regulations with those of the local governments. She said there’s no need for a martial rulelike implementation of lockdown
guidelines for as long as state agencies are coordinated. “There is no need for martial law, but the utilization of the right tactics, strategies and a unified enforcement of quarantine measures, emergency rules and policies in order to establish public order,” Plaza argued in a statement. She scored local governments for allegedly making matters worse for manufacturers and consumers alike by issuing executive orders (EO) that only disrupt the movement of goods and people. At a time like this, she said it is crucial that state officials come together and craft a single approach in addressing the health crisis.
“Everything must be strategized and harmonized together, not kanya-kanya,” Plaza said. “LGUs should not separately address the pandemic and create invisible walls,” the Peza chief added. “Lockdown policies per island or per region greatly affect or hamper the flow of goods and mobility of workers because of different EOs imposed by the LGUs.” In a survey by the Peza, a copy of which was obtained by the BusinessMirror, economic zone locators reported that they are suffering from logistical issues under the enhanced community quarantine imposed in the whole of Luzon. Continued on A2
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CITIRA TO BE TWEAKED TO ACCOUNT FOR COVID www.businessmirror.com.ph
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Thursday, April 23, 2020 Vol. 15 No. 196
P25.00 nationwide | 2 sections 16 pages | 7 DAYS A WEEK
WORLD BANK: VIRUS, OIL PRICE DIP HURT REMITTANCE FLOWS
INSTEAD of their families welcoming them at the airport, Filipino workers returning home will be met by Philippine Coast Guard and Airport Police members who will escort them to buses that will take them to their quarantine place. Thousands of OFWs are estimated to have been laid off, placed on forced leave, or suffered pay cuts due to the Covid-19 pandemic. The Department of Foreign Affairs said Filipinos wishing to return will be repatriated. NONIE REYES
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RESIDENTS, under the watchful eye of policemen reminding them to practice physical distancing, await their turn to pass through a disinfectant tent before being allowed to enter a public market in Las Piñas City. NONIE REYES
By Samuel P. Medenilla & Bernadette D. Nicolas
E
CONOMIC managers are seriously studying tweaks to the pending Corporate Income Tax and Incentives Reform Act (Citira) to provide relief to companies affected by the novel coronavirus disease (Covid-19).
Acting Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Karl Kendrick Chua on Wednesday said he wants revisions in the bill, which the House of Representatives approved last year, but is still pending in the Senate. The Department of Finance said on Wednesday it is studying whether to tweak the provisions of the pending Comprehensive Tax Reform Program (CTRP) bills, including the Citira, as a form of Covid-19 relief. Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III gave an indication of what provisions of the Citira could be tweaked to satisfy the twin objectives of, on one hand, helping shore up revenue for a government forced
to shell out billions in business stimulus and worker relief, and on the other, easing the pain of the sectors most impacted by the lockdowns forced by the pandemic. “Still under study, but one idea worth exploring, is the possibility of granting the FIRB (Fiscal Incentives Review Board) the flexibility of tailoring programs to the needs of individual companies,” Dominguez said in a message to reporters. Pressed whether the DOF is also considering to defer corporate income-tax cuts under the Citira bill or is eyeing to focus on tweaking incentives first, the country’s finance chief said: “Still under study.”
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Citira still urgent
IN an online press briefing, Chua, a former DOF undersecretary, said on Wednesday he thinks the Citira should still be passed as soon as possible since it will help provide additional revenue to the government for its Covid-related measures. However, he said it should contain new provisions to “help those affected by Covid.” “Once the Covid-19 crisis is over, this will be studied by the Department of Finance and Neda will be providing inputs because we need to know the economic impact of each policy,” Chua said, in a mix of English and Filipino. He made the statement as the Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry (PCCI) appealed to the government to keep its generous incentives for firms to attract companies, which are now relocating out of China. If passed into law, Citira would amend sections of the National Internal Revenue Code to reduce corporate income tax in the next decade, while gradually removing tax breaks for investors. Chua also pointed out that the government would be forced to
borrow money if it does not pass the needed tax reforms to finance the needs of the society. “Ang pangalawa po ay alam niyo po kung di po tayo magpapasa ng mga tax reforms, ang ibig sabihin niyan sa dami ng kailangang tulungan, sa dami ng kailangang serbisyong ibigay ay uutang po tayo. Pero ang utang ay hindi po ito libre na galing sa langit. Ang ibig lang sabihin ng utang hindi natin babayaran ngayon sa pamamagitan ng buwis. Ang ibig sabihin niyan, ’yung mga anak or mga apo ang pinapabayad natin nitong inutangan natin [Second, as you know, if we don’t pass the tax reforms, that means that with so many people who need help and so many services that must be provided, we’d have to borrow. But loans don’t fall from heaven. Incurring a debt only means we don’t have to pay for things right now by paying taxes. But it also means, our children and grandchildren will pay for our debts today],” he said. In early March, the PCCI urged the Senate to immediately pass Citira and end uncertainty in doing business in the country.
By Cai U. Ordinario
EMITTANCES from Filipinos abroad are expected to decline due to the coronavirus 2019 (Covid-19) pandemic, according to the World Bank, which said the projected fall in remittances of migrant workers worldwide would be the steepest in history. In a Migration and Development Brief titled “Covid-19 Crisis Through a Migration Lens,” the World Bank said remittances by overseas Filipinos still have not slowed to date at 4.8 percent in January and 4.4 percent in February. However, the World Bank cited the estimate earlier made by former Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia that remittances would decline by 20 percent to 30 percent due to the pandemic. "We do expect a decline in remittances, particularly from OFWs [overseas Filipino workers] engaged in tourism-related businesses. This comes up to only about 4 percent to 5 percent of remittances. We still need to factor in the lower oil prices in the simulation, though,” National Economic and Development Authority (Neda) Undersecretary for Policy and Planning Rosemarie G. Edillon told the B usinessM irror . Factoring oil prices in the estimates would affect remittances since millions of OFWs are working in oil-producing countries in the Middle East. The continuing plunge in world oil prices further shook the industry on Tuesday, when prices dived so low—at negative values—that some traders paid just to have the oil stocks taken from them. Based on the 2018 National Migration Survey of the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA), majority of Filipinos who work abroad went to the Middle East. Data showed around 20 percent of all Filipinos who migrated abroad in the past five years went to Saudi Arabia. Another 15 percent went to the United Arab Emirates; 7 percent went to Kuwait; and another 7 percent went to Qatar. In a recent Ateneo de Manila University (ADMU) Policy Brief, Ateneo Center for Economic Research and Development (ACERD) Director Alvin P. Ang and Institute for Migration and Development Issues (IMDI) Executive Director Jeremaiah M. Opiniano estimated around 300,000 to 400,000 OFWs will be laid off or suffer pay cuts due to the pandemic. Ang and Opiniano said this will likely cut the remittances from OFWs by 10 to 20 percent or as much as $3 billion to $6 billion, “the steepest decline in remittances in Philippine migration history.” This means remittances could only reach $24 billion to $27 billion this year from $30 billion in 2019. The high estimates were disputed, though, by recruitment industry veteran Lito Soriano, who said in a separate statement that he projected declines in remittances to only reach less than $3 billion, “a 10-percent decline from the $30-billion remittance in 2019,” adding that the $3 billion-$6 billion estimates by Ang and Opiniano—more or less parallel with House Ways and Means chairman Joey Salceda’s $5-billion projection—were too high. For its part, the World Bank said: “Year-on-year growth in remittances for January and February 2020 was 4.8 percent and 4.4 percent, respectively, suggesting little slowdown to date. However, the government is anticipating a 20- to 30-percent decline in remittances for 2020 and a corresponding growth rate of 2 percent due to the fallout from Covid-19.”
See “World Bank,” A2
Continued on A2
n JAPAN 0.4718 n UK 62.5334 n HK 6.5597 n CHINA 7.1676 n SINGAPORE 35.5174 n AUSTRALIA 31.9453 n EU 55.2079 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.5491
Source: BSP (April 22, 2020)