ADB loan to digitize LGU realty tax system By Cai U. Ordinario
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HE Asian Development Bank (ADB) has extended a new loan to help local governments digitize their local property tax valuation and collection. In a statement, the ADB said the $26.5-million loan will finance the Local Governance Reform Project (LGRP), which aims to adopt digital tools for transparent and accurate reporting of real property tax collection. The loan will also be used to update tax maps and property valuation assessments, as well as boost the knowledge of local assessors through capacity development efforts.
LOCALLY Stranded Individuals (LSIs)—some of whom have had to sleep outside Manila’s North Port passenger terminal since Saturday—wait outside the terminal in Manila on Monday for their trips to Bacolod, Davao and Dumaguete. They said they already had tickets and travel passes, along with medical clearances, but were barred entry because of a new requirement that they have to undergo RT-PCR swab tests. ROY DOMINGO
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“Local governments play a critical role in poverty reduction. Mobilizing local revenue in an efficient, equitable and transparent manner is vital to local governments’ goal of delivering accessible, quality public services,” said ADB Senior Public Management Specialist for Southeast Asia Robert Boothe. “This new project will provide the digital tools, systems and local staff training needed to help local governments raise revenue.” The project also supports the Comprehensive National Tax Reform Program (CTRP). Prior to the reform, it was estimated that local governments lost P30 billion or $600 million in property tax collections between 2004 and 2016.
This is not the first loan to be extended for the LGRP. In 2019 the ADB approved a $300-million policy-based loan for the program to help the government create a legal and institutional framework for local revenue mobilization. The new project will support the implementation of these policy reforms at the national and local levels. The ADB said that since 2006, it has supported the Philippines’ efforts to improve efficiency, accountability and transparency in local governments’ financial management and service delivery. With the new loan, the Philippines has secured a total of over $2.6 billion in ADB loans. This in-
cludes loans obtained to finance coronavirus 2019 (Covid-19)related responses. Even prior to this new loan, the Philippines has already exceeded its record borrowing of $2.5 billion in 2019. Earlier, the ADB said its lending to the Philippines is planned to reach a record high of $3.3 billion this year, with about half supporting the government’s infrastructure program. This will likely include priority projects such as the South Commuter Railway, the Edsa Greenways Pedestrian Walkways, and the Angat Water Transmission Aqueduct 7, as well as initiatives to boost social protection, sustainable tourism, and capital market development.
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Tuesday, June 30, 2020 Vol. 15 No. 264
EDWIN QUILATON, a member of the Airmen’s Jeepney Operators/Drivers Association, installs plastic dividers in his jeepney in Pasay City, optimistic about the government announcement that traditional jeepneys will be allowed to return on the road. Thousands of them have been idled, relying on doles, since the March lockdowns. NONIE REYES
IN compliance with public-health guidelines, passengers practice social distancing and log their names for contact tracing before boarding UV Express vans. ROY DOMINGO
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By Tyrone Jasper C. Piad
HE banks may tap the capital markets during this pandemic to improve their capitalization, the Bankers Association of the Philippines (BAP) said.
Several banks have been braving the debt market recently to raise funds, including Security Bank Corp., Bank of the Philippine Islands and Metropolitan Bank & Trust Co. “With good credit rating, banks may likewise opt to beef up their capital by raising funds through the capital markets,” BAP told the BusinessMirror in an e-mail. According to a study by First Metro Investment Corp. and University of Asia and the Pacific, corporate bonds are seen bouncing back in the second half after
slowing down in April. The report noted that most of the firms are refinancing existing debts by then since many have held off their expansion plans. The bankers’ group said that having a strong and resilient banking system was necessary to help the economy recover from this crisis. “Fortunately, Philippine banks are adequately capitalized and have ample buffers to support the sector’s recovery in particular, and the economy as a whole,” it said. According to preliminary data from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipi-
nas (BSP), the local banking sector’s capitalization reached P2.35 trillion in April, which is 2.08 percent higher than P2.30 trillion a month ago and 8.9 percent more than P2.16 trillion the year earlier. BAP added that the Central Bank has helped shore up the financial health of the sector during the pandemic by implementing relief measures. Just last week, the BSP went beyond expectations and decided to cut the interest rate by 50 basis points to 2.25 percent, bringing the overnight deposit and lending facilities to 1.75 percent and 2.75 percent, respectively. “Lastly, the joint collaboration with the regulators and lawmakers to re-evaluate and amend existing policies in order to sustain the resiliency of the banking industry is important more than ever during these challenging times,” the BAP said. Apart from raising funds via capital markets, the BAP said that banks could also maximize digital platforms, rationalize operations, innovate products and services
and look for new business prospects that cater to the needs of their clientele, among others, to improve capital position.
Staggered approach
THE banks have been increasing their reserves for potential loan loss amid higher bad debts during this pandemic. According to BSP data, allowance for credit losses and gross nonperforming loans reached P237.84 billion and P252.12 billion, respectively, as of April. The BAP said, however, that banks can also protect their credit portfolio and financial position by opting to use a staggered approach in recognizing bad debt provisions. “Furthermore, staggered booking of allowances for credit losses over a maximum period of 5 years for all types of credits extended to individuals and businesses directly affected by Covid-19 are allowed,” the group said. This is one of the relief measures for the financial sector outlined in Continued on A2
POGO just can’t call it quits, must pay tax due By Bernadette D. Nicolas
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ESPITE deciding to cease its operations in the country, a Philippine Offshore Gaming Operator (POGO) is not yet off the hook as the government vowed it will still go after its tax dues. Citing information from the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR), Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III on Monday said SC World Development Group Ltd. —a unit
of Macau’s gambling giant SunCity Group—is an offshore licensee and it is not registered with the BIR. SC World Development Group Ltd. is one of the two POGOs identified by the Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corp. (Pagcor) that have officially asked for cancellation of their offshore gaming licenses, according to reports. “We still intend to go after its tax dues,” Dominguez said, quoting the BIR.
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Aside from SC World Development Group Ltd., another POGO reported to be exiting the country is Don Tencess Asian Solutions Inc. According to the information from BIR relayed by Dominguez to reporters, Don Tencess Asian Services Solutions Inc. is a “local licensee and already paying franchise tax, and will be subjected to investigation before it will be given clearance to close by the BIR.” Aside from these two POGOs,
POLL: PINOYS TO TRIM TRAVEL BUDGETS WITH LOWER WAGES By Ma. Stella F. Arnaldo Special to the BusinessMirror
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OMESTIC tourists will be trimming their vacation budgets, even as they are likely to visit “Sun and Beach” destinations that require plane rides, once Covid travel restrictions are lifted. In fact, Boracay, the so-called crown jewel of Philippine tourism, remains top of mind of many bakasyonistas, according to a government-sponsored travel survey. In the Philippine Travel Survey Report commissioned by the Department of Tourism (DOT) and undertaken with the Asian Institute of Management and Guide to the Philippines, 44 percent of the 12,732 respondents see a reduction in their travel budgets, primarily because a majority (74 percent) project a cut in their incomes from 10 percent to over 50 percent. However, “for those expecting greater than 50-percent income reduction, it is interesting to note that majority still expect to reduce their travel budgets rather than completely eliminating it,” according to the survey which was presented at a webinar on Monday. Continued on A2
13 other service providers were also reported to have also closed down their operations and more will likely follow suit due to stringent tax rules from the BIR and the impact of movement restrictions amid the Covid-19 pandemic, according to Pagcor. The government allowed the partial resumption of operations of POGOs in May in an attempt to raise some revenues while several See “POGOs,” A2
n JAPAN 0.4662 n UK 61.6197 n HK 6.4437 n CHINA 7.0558 n SINGAPORE 35.8680 n AUSTRALIA 34.1932 n EU 56.0565 n SAUDI ARABIA 13.3160
Source: BSP (June 29, 2020)