BusinessMirror December 01, 2020

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ROTARY CLUB OF MANILA JOURNALISM AWARDS

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EJAP JOURNALISM AWARDS

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DEPARTMENT OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

2018 BANTOG MEDIA AWARDS

PHILIPPINE STATISTICS AUTHORITY

DATA CHAMPION

GOVT LOST $213-M TAX TAKE TO FAKE TOBACCO www.businessmirror.com.ph

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Tuesday, December 1, 2020 Vol. 16 No. 54

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

A BELEN (Nativity scene) is reflected on water brought about by rain, but the bad weather has obviously not dimmed its glow. Youths belonging to the St. Catherine of Alexandria Parish Church in Gerona, Tarlac, celebrated after their Belen, made completely from recyclable materials, won in the 13th Belenismo sa Tarlac. Unlike in previous years when the Belen entries were displayed in a public plaza, the entries stayed put in their original sites, and awards were delivered directly to them to avoid crowding of people in compliance with pandemic-induced restrictions. NONIE REYES

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By Elijah Felice Rosales

HE Philippines has lost at least $213 million in taxes to the sale of fake cigarettes, according to a report, as authorities vowed to double their efforts in going after counterfeit products in spite of quarantine challenges.

An advocacy paper, titled “Tackling Illicit Trade in Asean,” reported the Philippines last year lost $213.4 million in taxes to the sale of contraband tobacco. The country recorded the fifth highest value of revenue losses from counterfeit cigarettes in Southeast Asia, and accounted for up to 6 percent of the region’s total of $3.32 billion. Citing Euromonitor data, the report said Malaysia suffered the

largest tax leakage from the inflow of illicit cigarettes at $1.38 billion, followed by Indonesia’s $1.17 billion, Vietnam’s $289.9 million and Thailand’s $226.5 million. The paper estimated 7.93 billion sticks of fake cigarettes circulated in the Philippine economy last year. The $213-million tax loss was computed based on the price of the most sold brand (MSB) per 1,000 Continued on A2

REACTORS and guests—led by National Artist for Literature F. Sionil Jose (middle row, left)—at the Philippines Graphic and BusinessMirror webinar on “How’s your Soul Quotient? The state of literature in the time of pandemic” share a light moment at Monday’s forum that drew over a thousand mostly student participants. Top row, from left: award-winning book author Jose “Butch” Y. Dalisay Jr., one of two reactors; Graphic/BusinessMirror publisher Anton Cabangon; BusinessMirror editor in chief Lourdes M. Fernandez, webinar host. Middle row: Sionil Jose; veteran journalist-editor and UST teacher of literature and cinema Lito Zulueta, a reactor; and film critic and BusinessMirror columnist Tito Genova Valiente, forum moderator. Above: student Janie Rivera, and educators Ruzzel Mallari and Nora Babalo.

PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 48.1020

EXPERTS SPLIT, BUT DOF SAYS P1-B LEVEL FOR FIRB NOD DATA-DRIVEN By Bernadette D. Nicolas & Cai U. Ordinario

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HE Department of Finance has defended the need to set the P1-billion threshold for investments that are required to get the approval of the Fiscal Incentives Review Board (FIRB) under the proposed Corporate Recovery and Tax Incentives for Enterprises (CREATE) Act. The rationale for setting the P1-billion threshold was “data driven,” Finance Assistant Secretary and spokesperson Tony Lambino told the BusinessMirror, noting that only a small portion of investments have exceeded P1 billion in recent years. “From 2017 to 2019, only 3 out of 409, or less than 1 percent, of Peza [Philippine Economic Zone Authority] investments exceeded P1 billion. Less than a fourth of BOI [Board of Investments] investments exceeded P1 billion, based on BOI data from 2015 to 2019,” Lambino said in a message to the BusinessMirror. This contradicts the claim made by industry groups seeking a higher threshold for FIRB vetting. They had said a “low threshold” would net so many of the small investments and worsen red tape because of another layer of review and approval. Lambino argued that qualified investments at the P1-billion level will “likely entail a larger magnitude of tax incentives.” “Generally speaking, the larger the investment size, the larger the tax expenditure on average,” he said. Hence, Lambino pointed out this would need fiscal oversight via FIRB, a new body to be formed under CREATE, to be composed of the Secretaries of Finance, Trade and Industry, and National Economic and Development Authority. Nonetheless, Lambino said the FIRB can raise the threshold based on monitoring of investment data, based on the bill that was passed in the Senate. On concerns that the FIRB review may turn off foreign investors as this would be an “added bureaucracy,” Lambino argued there will still be “just one approval process, whether it’s the investment promotion agency (IPA) or the FIRB. “Also, we are preparing an online system to facilitate applications and improve the ease of doing business,” he said. Continued on A2

n JAPAN 0.4614 n UK 64.2739 n HK 6.2061 n CHINA 7.3169 n SINGAPORE 35.9372 n AUSTRALIA 35.4079 n EU 57.3232 n SAUDI ARABIA 12.8269

Source: BSP (November 30, 2020)


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