BY JOCELYN MONTEMAYOR
THE government yesterday rejected anew proposals to scrap the value added tax on oil products but said it is looking at a possible reduction.
Finance Secretary Margarito Teves said scrapping the 12 percent VAT on oil would benefit the rich and deny the poor of government programs that could help them cope with the rising prices of commodities.
"Department of Finance studies also show that lifting the VAT on oil will largely benefit the rich because they are the biggest consumers of oil while most of the consumption of poor families is VAT-exempt such as agricultural food products," Teves said.
Teves and acting Planning Secretary Augusto Santos said scrapping the VAT would mean a revenue loss of some P73.1 billion. The amount, Teves said, "could otherwise be used to fund programs to help the poor cope with rising oil and food prices."
Teves also said only Congress has the power to suspend the VAT on oil.
Budget secretary Rolando Andaya Jr. said a meeting is already being set up between the CBCP and government’s economic managers.
Santos said instead of a VAT suspension, the government prefers a more calibrated response that is leaning towards a "revenue-neutral suspension" scheme.
He said under the scheme, the government would lower the VAT on oil products to a level that would not affect or alter the targetted revenue collections for the year.
"From January to July this year, oil has increased so nagkaroon kami ng parang excess VAT revenue. What I’m saying about revenue neutral baka pwedeng babaan iyung VAT rate on oil to the extent that government will not anymore be generating additional revenues and instead have that additional revenues effectively be channeled to the oil consumers. So that’s what it’s meant by revenue neutrality," Santos said.
He said the government has excess earning from VAT because when it made its revenue projections at the start of the year, the price of oil in the world market then was at a $60 per barrel. Oil now costs $140 to $145 a barrel.
Santos said the amount of VAT reduction would depend on the current price level of oil and on Congress which passed the VAT law.
"Any deviation from 12 percent should be legislated," he added.
Santos said scrapping the VAT now would give only temporary relief but "in the medium term, in the long term we may have difficulties funding public investments."
REVISING TARGETS
He said the increasing oil prices is a global problem which has raised the inflation rate and prompted the government to revise its projections.
"We are already projecting a 7-9 percent inflation outlook for the whole year 2008 as against the earlier approved inflation target of 3-5 percent. That’s almost double the target," he said.
Andaya said due to the increased oil prices, the government was able to generate about P4 billion from the VAT on oil for the first quarter of the year. He said they expect the second quarter VAT collection from oil to be around the same level if not higher.
Based on projections at the start of the year, government will get at least P18 billion from the VAT on oil.
President Arroyo, in her opening statement at the Cabinet meeting, said the VAT revenues enable government to provide subsidies to the sectors heavily affected by the rising cost of products.
‘GAIN FROM PAIN’
Sen. Mar Roxas said the government’s refusal to suspend the oil VAT only shows its "insensitivity to the people and a policy that means piggybacking on the people’s pain to gain a windfall."
"What does the government want, to earn a windfall despite the people’s suffering, and then look good by giving the money back through subsidies? It would be better to leave the money in the people’s pockets. They know best how to spend it, instead of having it pass through the government and be politicized in the process," he said.
Roxas also called on the government’s economic managers to tell the people, "in black and white," what economic and fiscal policies are being implemented by the government.
"We see signs that our policies have indeed changed. For one, all these subsidies being announced were not specifically stated in this year’s budget," he said.
ALTERNATIVE SOURCES
Sen. Edgardo Angara said suspending the VAT would deplete government resources for food and electricity subsidies.
Angara said government should instead explore alternative energy sources to lessen the country’s dependence on imported oil.
"Solar, geothermal, hydro and wind energy are proven power technologies, for which we have great and untapped potential," he said.
Sen. Francis Escudero said for workers to cope with inflation, the government should see to it that wages which should have been remitted as taxes are retained in pay envelopes on account of the new law exempting minimum wage earners from income tax and increasing tax exemptions for other employees.
June’s 14-year high inflation rate of 11.4 percent wiped out recent wage increases granted to public and private sector employees, Escudero said.
"It’s back to zero. As if no wage hike was granted. Inflation has cancelled whatever value was recently added to pay envelopes" Escudero said.
At the same time the 10 percent hike granted to 1.4 million state workers will take effect this month, a move that will cost government an initial P12 billion this year.
But because the prices of services and goods have risen faster than the salaries of those who buy them, the projected additional purchasing power from the salary increases did not materialize, Escudero said.
Escudero said these pressures "will activate a corresponding pressure for wage salaries, which government has to calibrate carefully lest we enter into the maelstrom of an inflation spiral." – With Dennis Gadil and JP Lopez