Three agencies link arms in urging passage of ‘pro-poor’ tax reform bill

Leading officials of the three government departments have appealed to legislators to swiftly approve the first package of the Duterte administration’s Comprehensive Tax Reform Program (CTRP) that is seen to dramatically increase spending on not only infrastructure but also on the development of country’s human capital.

The three departments—Departments of Education, Health and the Department of Budget Management described the CTRP as a “win-win” and “pro-poor” measure,

They said at a recent forum at the Philippine International Convention Center that the CTRP deserves the support of every sector because it will enable the government to accelerate spending on education and health as well as on social protection for the poorest of the poor while putting more money in the pockets of 99 percent of the population.

DBM Secretary Benjamin Diokno, who opened the forum, said that the CTRP, “which I strongly support,” is “the second priority in the Duterte administration’s socioeconomic reform agenda to alleviate poverty and unlock the economic potential of the country.”

DOH Undersecretary Lilibeth David said Package One of the CTRP is necessary to enable the government to hike its budget for health care, which is currently one of the lowest among the countries in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).

David said that adequate spending for quality health care “will mean the poor are not excluded.”

“We really need to support this. I will ask for your support because we need this to improve our health. If you look at the health spending data in countries – even just the ASEAN — the $135 per capita that the Philippines spends on health is so much smaller than what Malaysia spends, which is $456 per capita. Let’s just look at Thailand, $228 per capita. Vietnam spends $142 per capita,” David said, citing 2014 figures from the World Bank’s Health Expenditures Database.

In terms of out-of-pocket spending for health, David said Filipinos still pay 54 percent of their total health expenses with their own money, second to Cambodians who shoulder 74 percent out-of-pocket, David said. But she likewise pointed out that Indonesia has lesser out-of-pocket expenses at 47 percent, and Vietnam with only 37 percent.

“We cannot leave health to markets alone. If we leave it to markets alone, the poor and the marginalized would be excluded. Government has to intervene so that health for the poor, the marginalized, and disadvantaged is inclusive. So with the comprehensive tax reform, finally, quality healthcare will mean the poor are not excluded,” David said.

DepEd Assistant Secretary and chief of staff Nepomuceno Malaluan said education will be a key beneficiary of the CTRP, not only because the bill specifies that a portion of the additional revenues to be collected from it should go to this sector, but also because the government is mandated under the law to give the highest priority to education.

“In our view, certainly, the tax reform package is pro-poor. What is anti-poor is if we come to a tragedy where, as mentioned by (Department of Finance) Undersecretary (Karl Kendrick) Chua, this is not taken as a package,” Malaluan said.

“[Some] individuals in the name of protecting the poor mangle the CTRP and cherry pick those that are popular because of the tax relief. But at the same time end up with a net tax take that is less than where we started from. To us, that will be the biggest tragedy,” he added.

Malaluan was referring to some quarters who are pushing for the approval of only the tax relief portion of the CTRP, which is the lowering of personal income tax (PIT) rates, while abandoning the revenue-enhancing provisions of the tax reform package that aim to broaden the tax base and plug the massive leakages in the current tax system.

According to Malaluan, the CTRP is crucial to delivering quality learning to young Filipinos, especially now when several “cost drivers” have made it even more imperative to spend more on education.

These cost drivers include, he said, the projected increase in elementary and high school enrollees under the K-12 curriculum from 24 million in 2016 to around 27 to 28 million by 2022; upgrading learning aids with modern technological tools; strengthening technical-vocational education under the K-12; and meeting rising rehabilitation expenses for school buildings and facilities affected by climate change.

He said investing more in education and health “will translate to higher incomes and more productive sectors.”

DBM Director Rolando Toledo, who heads the Department’s Fiscal Planning and Reforms Bureau, said the CTRP is a “win-win proposition that we wish our legislators will support enthusiastically.”

The CTRP will make the tax system “simpler, fairer and more efficient,” and “put money in the pockets of 99 percent of our population,” Toledo said.

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