Et tu, Brute?
The last words of Julius Ceasar to his friend Marcus Brutus as he
confronted his assassins on the Ides of March reflected the sentiment
of finance and health officials a day after Sen. Ralph Recto reported
out the Senate version of the sin tax reform bill.
The bill proposed by Recto’s ways and means committee envisioned
increased revenues reaching P15 billion in new tax rates for tobacco and
alcoholic drinks—way below the projected P60 billion targeted by the
departments of finance and health.
Internal Revenue Commissioner Kim Henares said that officials of
the two departments had given Recto’s panel “cooperation, assistance and
all the data” he needed.
“They put in hours of work, till the wee hours of the morning,”
Henares said in a news conference at the Department of Justice
Thursday. “A lot of them felt betrayed.”
Sen. Miriam Defensor-Santiago, one of the authors of the
measure, called on students and social media users to register their
protest against what she called the “death star bill.”
“I am gobsmacked—speechless
with amazement—at the committee report. It bears no recognizable
resemblance to my bill. It is an abject surrender to the very rich and
very powerful tobacco and alcohol lobby,” Santiago said in a statement.
“Under the Santiago bill, government will raise P60 billion for
the first year. By contrast, the Recto bill will earn only P15 billion.
The foregone revenue could go to universal health care, such as more
hospitals, rural health units, and barangay health stations,” she said.
She said she shared the disappointment of Finance Secretary Cesar
Purisima and Health Secretary Enrique Ona as well as the antismoking
groups.
Henares said administration officials had expected the Senate to
improve on the House version of the bill that projected an income of P31
billion.
She stressed that it should be regarded as a “health measure,”
rejecting Recto’s explanation that he could not propose hefty taxes on
tobacco, beer and other alcoholic drinks because this would discourage
people from buying these and thus, would mean less revenues.
For universal health coverage
While the government collects P45 billion
from tobacco taxes, it spends P144 billion to treat the four major
ailments caused by smoking, Henares said. “So if no one is smoking, then
the government will be saving P144 billion.”
Sin tax revenues will go to universal health coverage and the upgrade of government hospitals and other facilities, she said.
Asked to comment on reports of a strong
tobacco industry lobby against the measure, she said taxes in accordance
with law should be followed. “What we are trying to take care of is the
health and the right of the many.”
Justice Assistant Secretary for
Legislative Affairs Zabedin Azis said in the same news conference: “We
will need assistance from all concerned, those who believe sin taxes are
for the benefit of the country. We have to work together to convey to
our senators there is really a need to adopt this.”
In an interview with reporters on
Wednesday, Recto insisted that his report represented “an equilibrium”
and its final form and shape was up to his colleagues.
“There will always be those who’d
criticize. There are those who want to raise the tax. There are those
who want to bring it down. What we came up with is in the middle. In
economics, it’s called equilibrium. We’re neither to the left nor to
the right.”
Unitary tax system
The Philippines already has one of the
lowest prices of cigarettes and alcohol in Southeast Asia, Santiago
said. “When cigarettes and liquor are cheap, more people will use them….
That’s why for every hour, 10 Filipinos die from tobacco use. Smoking
causes 240 deaths every single day,” she said.
Santiago said the tax on tobacco should be
70 percent of the price of the product according to an international
convention on tobacco control. This is why her bill imposes a tax of
P30 per pack of cigarettes by 2015, she said.
“My bill imposes a unitary tax system, as
recommended by the World Health Organization. The Recto bill uses a
three-tier tax rate for tobacco and alcohol products, making them
cheaper and thereby encouraging their use,” Santiago said.
Sen. Ferdinand Marcos Jr., who hails from the tobacco-producing Ilocos region, supported Recto.
“The increase in taxation is no longer as
burdensome,” Marcos told reporters. “Producers on the tobacco side are
happy because at least Senator Recto understands the complicated issue
of taxation.”
Viable investment hub
In a speech at the 38th Philippine Business
Conference and Expo at the Manila Hotel, President Benigno Aquino
called on lawmakers to craft a sin tax bill that would generate more
revenues to give the public more access to health services.
To make the country a viable investment
destination, the President said the government was investing not only in
infrastructure but in human capital, by granting conditional cash
transfer to the poor and expanding the coverage of the Philippine Health
Insurance Corp. program.
“We are also counting on the solidarity of
our legislators in the sin tax bill, which can only improve our fiscal
situation. With the bulk of tax revenues generated from this proposed
measure going to universal healthcare, we will be able to widen access
to, and improve health services for all,” he said.
Presidential spokesperson Edwin Lacierda declined to say if MalacaƱang was dismayed by the Recto bill.
Health issue
“We will leave it with Senator Recto. We have already laid out the reasons why we are pushing for our sin tax measure. We have already laid out that this is a health issue; that the revenues that we’re going to collect will be able to fund sufficiently our universal health care coverage as well as the various health centers that we proposed,” he said.
Lacierda said there were “safety nets” that would address the concerns of the tobacco farmers.
On Recto’s claims that his version was more practical, Lacierda pointed to the experience of other Southeast Asian countries where companies still enjoyed high revenues despite high government taxes.
“For instance in Singapore, even if the sin taxes are high, they still enjoyed high revenues,” he said.