BusinessMirror April 24, 2020

Page 1

House pitches own Citira tweaks By Jovee Marie N. Dela Cruz & Butch Fernandez

P

RESIDENT Duterte may be allowed to tweak the corporate income tax (CIT) reduction and fiscal incentives of investors affected by the Covid-19 crisis under the proposed revision of an economist-lawmaker to the proposed Corporate Income Tax and Incentives Rationalization Act (Citira). House Committee on Ways and Means Chairman Joey Sarte Salceda, the principal author of the measure, said the proposed changes will grant the President—and not a fiscal incentives board—the flexibility to grant CIT and fiscal incentive to firms affected by the crisis. “We intend to insert Covid-19 as eligibility during the bicameral conference committee meeting with the Senate,” he said. The proposed Citira, which seeks to boost the country’s gross domestic product by 3.6 percent annually while adding only 0.9 percent to inflation, was approved by the House of Representatives last year but is still pending before the Senate plenary. Salceda was reacting to reports that Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez and newly named Acting Socioeconomic Planning Secre-

IAN ARIVE, a former jeepney driver, finds a new job driving Mandaluyong City’s initiative MediDyip, an alternative ambulance service to help ease the load on the city’s ambulances that are used in Covid-19 efforts. The repurposed jeepney can accommodate three passengers on each side to comply with the physical-distancing protocols. NONIE REYES

ROTARY CLUB OF MANILA JOURNALISM AWARDS

2006 National Newspaper of the Year 2011 National Newspaper of the Year 2013 Business Newspaper of the Year 2017 Business Newspaper of the Year 2019 Business Newspaper of the Year

tary Karl Kendrick Chua, in separate briefing, are looking to tweak the Citira provisions in a bid to factor in the impact of Covid-19 and provide relief to businesses. Dominguez said the DOF is looking into the possibility of granting the Fiscal Incentives Review Board (FIRB) the flexibility of tailoring programs to the needs of individual companies. On Thursday, Senate Minority Leader Frank Drilon said that “an acceleration of the scheduled reduction in corporate income taxes can provide the relief.” But, Drilon, in a text message to the BusinessMirror, also reminded policymakers that “the fiscal issue and deficit of such acceleration of the scheduled reduction must be addressed.”

Maximum flexibility

UNDER Salceda’s proposal, maximum flexibility to grant CIT and incentives will be given to the President. This proposed Citira or the Package 2 of the Comprehensive Tax Reform Package seeks to reduce the 30-percent corporate income tax to 20 percent gradually by lowering the same into 2 percent every after 2 years. The proposed Citira seeks to amend sections of the National Internal Revenue Code to

reduce corporate income tax in the next decade, while gradually removing tax breaks for investors. But with Salceda’s flexibility proposal, the President can allow a Covid-19-affected firm to get lower CIT rate early. Salceda is not keen on Dominguez’s remark that the DOF is looking into the possibility of granting the FIRB the flexibility of tailoring programs to the needs of individual companies. Salceda described this as “undue delegation to an agency with limited capacity and history in planning implementation and overnight.” He also reminded that “Congress remains the chief policymaking body.” “Under Citira, FIRB is already designed to study investment proposals and determine their contribution to national goals set and defined by Congress. Any deviation or flexibility I’d rather give to the President as head of Neda Board. The FIRB at best can propose them but not approve them,” Salceda said. The FIRB, to be institutionalized under the Citira bill, is tasked to review and approve all projects seeking to obtain incentives from the

See “Citira,” A2

BusinessMirror A broader look at today’s business

EJAP JOURNALISM AWARDS

BUSINESS NEWS SOURCE OF THE YEAR (2017, 2018)

DEPARTMENT OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

2018 BANTOG MEDIA AWARDS

PHILIPPINE STATISTICS AUTHORITY

DATA CHAMPION

SLOW BUT SURE LIFTING OF ECQ LIKELY OPTION www.businessmirror.com.ph

n

Friday, April 24, 2020 Vol. 15 No. 197

P25.00 nationwide | 2 sections 16 pages | 7 DAYS A WEEK

DTI CHIEF, EXPERTS FRAME ‘NEW NORMAL’ IN BIZ, LIFESTYLES By Elijah Felice Rosales & Cai U. Ordinario

W

HAT’S the new normal in business operations in the lockdown aftermath? It’s the enforcement of social distancing, mandatory wearing of face masks, setting up of sanitation stations, taking of body temperature and provision of nutrients, said the country’s trade and industry chief. And, for academic scholars, the new normal in lifestyle would entail a focus on the “essentials” that were forgotten pre-Covid-19, but were rudely foisted on the public psyche by the pandemic: the need for fresh, nutritious food; a healthy work-life balance, among others. Trade Secretary Ramon M. Lopez on Thursday said firms will be required to emulate the health measures practiced among leading exporters. These protocols, he explained, will be the new normal in business operations, as the government prepares guidelines for the country’s post-quarantine scenario. “Minimum health standards—such as strict social distancing, wearing of face masks, presence of sanitation stations, taking of body temperature and provision of vitamins— must always be observed in work and public places,” Lopez said in a statement. He shared his views as the nation awaited President Duterte’s decision on whether to lift or extend a second time the Luzon-wide enhanced community quarantine that began March 17 in the race to stop the transmission of Covid-19; or, as suggested by most experts he consulted, to order a modified or selective lockdown that keeps the restrictions on areas with high infection rates while unshackling geographical areas or sectors with minimal or no cases.

Continued on A2

A STREET vendor at the Blumentritt public market in Manila goes about her chores as an armored personnel carrier with PNP Special Action Force personnel in full battle gear passes by. Public markets in Metro Manila have been a focus of authorities because of the difficulty in enforcing social distancing despite the Covid-19-induced lockdown. BERNARD TESTA

T

By Samuel P. Medenilla

HE government is moving toward a calibrated lifting of the six-week enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) after April 30, in a bid to balance economic rebooting with decisively curbing Covid-19—an effort that health authorities said Thursday indicated signs of improvement, with the curve on track toward “flattening” but not yet quite there. Presidential Spokesman Harry Roque, briefing Palace reporters hours before a muchawaited announcement by President Duterte of his decision on

the fate of the ECQ, provided the framework in which the nation will proceed after April 30, with indications pointing to a modified lockdown. This means that,

PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 50.8350

as recommended by most of the health experts Duterte consulted earlier this week, geographical areas and sectors with minimal or no infections may see their lockdowns lifted; while those that still see high numbers of cases will remain under ECQ. Metro Manila—which accounts for two-thirds of Philippine cases—along with parts of Bulacan and Calabarzon, and Cebu and Davao are among the areas usually cited as still having troubling infection rates. The readiness of the health sector to handle new Covid-19 cases is a major consideration of President Duterte in his decision on the ECQ’s fate in Luzon.

In a press briefing on Thursday, Roque revealed the framework of the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF), which was already submitted to Duterte so he could decide on the ECQ’s fate after April 30. “The decision of the President [under the framework] is based on the ability of the health sector to give [medical] attention to people who could get sick from Covid-19 until we have a vaccine or medicine for it,” Roque said. He said only areas that met the “minimum health standards” will be allowed to lift or modify the ECQ. Continued on A2

n JAPAN 0.4719 n UK 62.7050 n HK 6.5594 n CHINA 7.1767 n SINGAPORE 35.6212 n AUSTRALIA 32.1277 n EU 55.0238 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.5110

Source: BSP (April 23, 2020)


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.