Lockdowns dent BIR 7-month collection By Bernadette D. Nicolas
@BNicolasBM
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HE Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) fell short of its P1.226trillion collection goal for January to July as Covid-19-induced lockdown restrictions continue to hamper economic activity. Latest preliminary BIR data obtained by the BusinessMirror showed the bureau’s collection in the seven-month period settled at P1.206 trillion in the seven-month period, narrowly missing its target by 1.65 percent or P20.28 billion. However, this is still higher by 7.94 percent or P88.7 billion compared to its revenue take of P1.12
trillion in the same period last year. BIR Deputy Commissioner Arnel Guballa pointed to the lockdown restrictions in the pandemic as the reason behind the bureau’s failure to hit its target for the seven-month period. For July alone, however, the BIR collected P171.85 billion, exceeding its P165.82-billion collection goal for the month by 3.64 percent. It also surpassed its P160.57billion take in the same month last year by 7.03 percent. To recall, Metro Manila and nearby provinces Cavite, Rizal, Laguna, and Bulacan were placed under Enhanced Community Quarantine from March 22 to April 11 to ad-
dress the surge in Covid-19 cases. After that, the government eased the restrictions in National Capital Region Plus (NCR Plus) to Modified Enhanced Community Quarantine from April 12 to May 14. Then, NCR Plus was placed under General Community Quarantine from the latter part of May until the end of July. Guballa said they still hope to collect a total of P2.081 trillion. Last year, BIR raked in P1.95 trillion, exceeding its downscaled revenue collection target of P1.686 trillion. The government hopes to raise more revenues this year to cover the expected higher budget deficit. The
Cabinet-level Development Budget Coordination Committee (DBCC) now projects this to reach a new record high of 1.86 trillion or 9.3 percent of the country’s GDP. The DBCC earlier slashed its growth projection for the Philippine economy this year to 6 to 7 percent— from its previous forecast range of 6.5 to 7.5 percent—also due to the implementation of stricter lockdown measures in NCR Plus in the second quarter. The Philippine economy grew by 11.8 percent in the second quarter, the highest since the fourth quarter of 1988 when the economy grew 12 percent. See “Lockdowns,” A2
REMITTANCE LEVELS IN JUNE HIGHEST FOR 2021
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Tuesday, August 17, 2021 Vol. 16 No. 307
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Police Staff Sergeant Fernando Cabilla and a PPE-clad volunteer help local government officials distribute goods to barangays in Muntinlupa City that were placed under Extreme Localized Community Quarantine (ELCQ) for having clusters of Covid-19 cases. NONIE REYES/ROY DOMINGO
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By Bianca Cuaresma
@BcuaresmaBM
ILIPINO migrant workers continued to send more money back home in June, sustaining the strong growth of remittances entering the country during the month.
The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) reported on Monday that remittances that coursed through banks in June reached $2.64 billion. This is the highest monthly value of remittances to the country for the entire 2021. This is also a 7-percent growth
from the $2.465 billion level of remittances in June last year. Broken down, the BSP said cash remittances expanded following the increase in receipts from land-based workers by 7.1 percent to $2.136 billion from $1.994 billion in the previous year and sea-
based workers by 6.5 percent to $502 million from $472 million in 2020. The strong remittance performance in June brought the sixmonth total to $14.92 billion, 6.4 percent higher than the $14.02 billion remittance level in the January-to-June period of 2020. According to the BSP, the growth in cash remittances in January to June this year came largely from the United States (US), Malaysia and South Korea. Meanwhile, in terms of country sources, the US registered the highest share of overall remittances at 40.1 percent in the first six months of 2021, followed by Singapore, Saudi Arabia, the Unit-
ed Kingdom, Japan, the United Arab Emirates, Canada, South Korea, Qatar and Taiwan. The combined remittances from these top 10 countries accounted for 78.4 percent of total cash remittances. Remittances to the country first fell into contraction territory in April last year due to the global economic disruption caused by the pandemic. It slowly recovered throughout the year and climbed back to the growth territory starting February this year. This, despite the fact that many OFWs in countries around the world were impacted by the pandemic. See “Remittance,” A2
Social-media influencers warned: Pay tax
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HE Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) reminded socialmedia influencers to pay their income tax and business tax as it warned that they may be held criminally liable for failure to comply with their obligations. In its Revenue Memorandum Circular 97-2021 released on Monday, the BIR said it has been receiving reports that certain social-media influencers have not been paying their income taxes despite earning huge
income from different platforms. Apart from this, the BIR cited reports that they are not registered with the BIR or are registered under different tax types or line of business but are also not declaring their earnings from social-media platforms for tax purposes. “This Circular is therefore issued to clarify the tax obligations of all social-media influencers, individual or corporation, with the end goal of raising revenues from their undeclared income and at the same time,
PESO exchange rates n US 50.4180
reminding them of their obligations under the law and of the possible consequences of their failure to pay taxes,” read the circular signed by BIR Commissioner Caesar R. Dulay. Unless exempted in line with the provisions of the National Internal Revenue Code, the BIR said socialmedia influencers shall be liable to pay income tax and business tax, which may either be percentage tax or value-added tax. The bureau also warned that social-media influencers who fail to file
returns and pay taxes may be criminally liable apart from paying the taxes due, as well as the corresponding penalties. It also warned against under-declaration of taxable sales, receipts, or income, or a substantial overstatement of deductions. “It must be emphasized that the BIR also has the power to obtain information from foreign tax authorities pursuant to the Exchange of Information [EOI] provision of the relevant tax treaties.
‘DISAPPOINTING’ Q2 GDP SHOWS PHL ‘AMONG LAST TO RECOVER IN REGION’
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N T ER NAT IONA L t h in k tank Moody’s A nalytics said the country’s growth in the second quarter of the year proved to be “disappointing,” bolstering their view that the Philippines will be among the last countries in the region to recover economically. In a research note on Monday, Moody’s Analytics said Philippine recovery has been affected by the relatively strict movement controls during the quarter as the country continued to struggle to contain Covid-19 cases. “The early signs of recovery in the Philippine economy have proved to be short-lived.... The sluggish vaccine rollout coupled with decentralized health advice and poor adherence to social distancing measures are to blame. Conditions are not much better in the current quarter, as movement controls remain in place along with elevated infections,” Moody’s
Analytics said. The research firm also said the slow pace of the vaccination rollout remains a major drag and a downside risk to the Philippines’s economic recovery as only 10 percent of the total adult population of the country is fully vaccinated. Moody’s Analytics further warned that the country may be forced to prolong the “costly mobility restrictions” if the number of Covid-19 cases continues to be elevated. Given these conditions, the think tank said they maintain their assumption that the country will not recover lost output up until next year. “We maintain our expectation that the Philippines will be amongst the last in Asia to regain lost output from the pandemic. The Philippines is not expected to return to pre-pandemic levels until mid-2022,” Moody’s Analytics said. See “Q2 GDP,” A2
See “Social-media,” A2
n japan 0.4599 n UK 69.9096 n HK 6.4783 n CHINA 7.7845 n singapore 37.2363 n australia 37.1127 n EU 59.4680 n SAUDI arabia 13.4445
Source: BSP (August 16, 2021)