Tax Collections | SubicNewsLink

Showing posts with label Tax Collections. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tax Collections. Show all posts

02 October 2019

SBMA padlocks cigarette maker for tax evasion

The Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority (SBMA) closed down a cigarette manufacturer in this Freeport for tax evasion amidst a crackdown on companies here that fail to pay appropriate taxes and follow government regulations.

SBMA Chairman and Administrator Wilma T. Eisma identified the company as Qiu Tobacco Industrial Co. Ltd. Corp., which is engaged in the transshipment, packaging and repacking of tobacco products.


Eisma and Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) Region 3 Director Ed Tolentino led a joint SBMA-BIR team on Friday in inspecting the facilities of six cigarette manufacturers at the Gateway Park here to flush out those involved in the circulation of untaxed and fake cigarette products in the country.

During the inspection, it was found out that Qiu Tobacco, which produces cigarette brands like Belmont, Navy and D&B, did not have excise tax stamps on their soft packs.

A Chinese national who was caretaker at the facility said the cigarette brands were sold outside the country. But the joint SBMA-BIR team noted that the cigarettes had markings indicating they were intended for Philippine market.

Tolentino said this was a violation of Sec. 263 of the National Internal Revenue Code, which prohibits the possession or removal of articles subject to excise tax without payment of tax. Excise tax is a duty on manufactured goods which is levied at the moment of manufacture, rather than at sale.

The BIR official added that the lack of stamps meant the firm was not paying the proper tax for each pack that was manufactured and sold.

At the same time, the Qiu representative at the facility was not able to present a copy of the firm’s Certificate of Registration and Tax Exemption (CRTE). Eisma said this was a violation of an SBMA requirement to display the CRTE in company facilities.

A check with the SBMA Business and Investment Group indicated that Qiu Tobacco was issued a CRTE on December 5 last year. The permit was good until May 31, 2021.

Eisma said, however, that because of its failure to pay excise taxes, the company will be closed until further notice from the BIR.

The SBMA chief also reiterated that it was the agency’s mandate to ensure that all companies inside the Subic Bay Freeport Zone are paying their taxes properly.

She added that if a company complies with the law and the rules and regulations of the agency, the SBMA will protect that company. “If not, we will prosecute to the full extent of the law,” Eisma said. (JRR/MPD-SBMA)

PHOTO:

SBMA Chairman and Administrator Wilma T. Eisma and BIR Regional Investigation team member Gene Bragais (left) through an interpreter question the caretaker of the Qiu Tobacco Industrial Co. Ltd. Corp. (right) during inspection of the firm’s cigarette-manufacturing facility on Sept. 27. (MPD-SBMA)

16 March 2015

SBMA commended for its financial and investment gains

The Regional Development Council of Region 3 (RDC 3) recently cited the Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority (SBMA) for the financial and investment strides it had achieved in the past three years.

In a resolution passed by the RDC 3 last January, the council commended the SBMA for “the financial viability of the authority, improving the collection of customs duties and other taxes, as well as increasing investment commitments within the Freeport and Special Economic Zone, and for optimizing container traffic at Subic Port”.

According to the same resolution, “SBMA was able to restore the financial viability of the authority by posting annual net incomes ranging from Php0.8 billion to Php1.3 billion from 2012 to 2014, a complete turnaround from the negative income streams ranging from Php0.2 billion for six (6) consecutive years starting 2006 to 2011”.

SBMA chairman and administrator Roberto V. Garcia recently reported that SBMA hit new record highs in its 2014 financial performance, as it scored a net income of P1.6 billion vs. its 2013 income of P1.1 billion for a substantial increase of 40 per cent.

The RDC 3, which serves as the counterpart of the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) Board at the sub-national level in Region 3, likewise noted in its resolution that the SBMA’s implementation of various trade facilitation measures and innovations in systems and procedures had boosted the collection of customs duties and other taxes.

Through these actions by SBMA, “...the collection of customs duties and other taxes in within SBF-SEZ increased dramatically from Php7.2 billion in 2011 to Php16.8 billion that corresponds to 233 percent growth”, the RDC 3 said.

The NEDA regional office likewise cited the Subic agency for maximizing container port traffic in the Subic port and for initiating ”business process improvements and promotion activities that boosted investment commitments fromPhp3.6 billion in 2-13 to Php9.7 billion in 2014”.

Due to the renewed business and manufacturing climate in the Freeport, the RDC 3 said that the gross revenue share of affected local government units correspondingly increased by 40 percent, from PhP145 milllion in 2011 to PhP203 million in 2014.

Garcia welcomed the RDC 3’s commendation and assurance of full support to SBMA’s development efforts geared toward making Central Luzon a leading regional transhipment and global gateway.

“The Agency’s sterling three-year record performance could be attributed to good governance, the implementation of its strategic initiatives, and the hard work of the Agency’s management and employees,” Garcia said. (AMF/CorComm/MPD-SBMA)

09 February 2015

Subic Freeport tax collections continue six-year uptrend

Tax collections in this free port by both the Bureau of Customs (BoC) and the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) continue to break annual records in the last six years, providing concrete proof that the free port economy is steadily growing.

Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority (SBMA) Chairman and Administrator Roberto Garcia said that customs collections and income taxes from Subic-registered companies and their employees “never faltered, and mirrored the overall uptick in the Philippine economy in the past few years.”

“This only shows that there has been continuous growth among business locators here in terms of earnings, as well as employment,” Garcia added.

According to data submitted by the BoC and the BIR offices here, their combined collection performance began to improve in 2009 when both collecting agencies netted P5.6 billion, compared to P5.3 billion in 2008, or a growth of 6.18 percent.

In 2010, this increased by 19.25 percent to P6.7 billion; by 8.14 percent to P7.2 billion in 2011; by 5.42 percent to P7.6 billion in 2012; and by 66.28 percent to P12.7 billion in 2013.

Last year, the two agencies collected a total of P17.1 billion worth of taxes from January to December, putting the 2014 collections at 35 percent more than that in the previous year.

Out of the 2014 combined collections, the BoC contributed P15.3 billion, a record that was 36 percent higher than its P11.2-billion customs tally in 2013.

BOC also registered in 2014 non-cash collections of P2.2 billion from government-to-government transactions.

Meanwhile, the BIR here collected a total of P1.8 billion, accounted for income taxes worth P1.4 billion, value-added taxes worth P381 million, percentage taxes worth P1.8 million, and other taxes worth P29.5 million.

Garcia said that a portion of the BIR collection here is the five-percent corporate tax computed from the annual gross income of Subic-registered locator companies.

He added that the SBMA remits to three percent out of the five percent corporate taxes to the national treasury, and releases the other two percent to neighboring communities in the form of local government unit (LGU) shares.

Late last week, the SBMA made available revenue shares worth P105 million to the eight LGUs adjacent to and affected by the operation of the Subic Bay Freeport Zone. (RFD/MPD-SBMA)

10 January 2014

Subic collections up

SUBIC BAY FREEPORT—The Bureau of Customs registered revenue collections of P11.2 billion in 2013, up 77 percent from P6.3.billion in 2012, driven by strong duties and tax take.

Port of Subic District collector Arnulfo Marcos said tax collections in the last quarter of 2013 rose 110 percent to P3.30 billion from P1.57 billion year-on-year.

Marcos said the P11.2-billion collections 2013 exceeded the Freeport’s target of P6.15 billion by 83 percent.

He said July registered the highest monthly tax collection with P1.02 billion, or up 220 percent from P321 million on year, followed by December with P1.10 billion, up 149 percent from P442 million on year.

Marcos attributed the increased collections to the reforms institutionalized by his predecessors at the Port of Subic and the recent reconfiguration program and reshuffle of key frontline officials. (Cecille Garcia, Manila Standard)

http://manilastandardtoday.com/2014/01/10/subic-collections-up/


10 July 2013

Subic’s customs collections rise 58% to P5b

The Bureau of Customs here said revenue collections in the first half grew by more than 50 percent year-on-year and exceeded the goal for the period.

Port of Subic customs collector Adelina Molina said the Freeport zone collected P5 billion in customs duties and taxes in the January-June period, or 58 percent higher than the P3.1 billion posted in the same period last year.

The agency also surpassed its first-half target of P3.03 billion by P1.09 billion, or 62.6 percent.

Molina said BoC-Subic showed strong collection performance in the months of April and June, when it achieved record-high monthly collections of P1.09 billion and P1.05 billion, respectively.

The strong April and June collection took the Freeport’s second-quarter tally to P3.09 billion, or 85.5 percent more than the P1.42 billion it collected in the second quarter last year. The figure also represented a 95.5-percent increase over the P1.58-billion quarterly revenue target.

Data from the BoC’s statistics division showed collection in the first quarter grew 26.5 percent to P1.8 billion from a year ago. It also surpassed the target collection of P1.45 billion for the period by 26.5 percent.

Molina attributed the collection performance to the ‘team effort’ shown by different departments of her office as well as close cooperation with Freeport authorities.

Customs Commissioner Ruffy Biazon made a surprise visit recently to the Port of Subic to personally commend Molina for achieving an unprecedented collection performance for the month of April.

Biazon showed his appreciation and support to the team of Molina, including deputy collectors Ernelito Aquino for assessment, Andrew Fernandez for operations, Irineo Onia Jr. for administration, BoC law enforcement head Elpidio Manuel, Customs intelligence and investigation service chief Jose Du.

Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority chairman Roberto Garcia cited Molina for a “job well-done” not just for the high collection performance but also for strict enforcement of its mandate to curb smuggling. (Cecille Garcia, Manila Standard Today)

05 February 2013

2012 BIR & BOC tax remittances hit P7.62 billion in Subic Freeport

Tax collection agencies in this country’s premier free port have turned over to the national treasury a total of P7.62 billion in taxes collected from January to December 2012.

Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority (SBMA) chairman and administrator Roberto Garcia said the amount was derived from taxes collected by the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) and the Bureau of Customs (BOC).

Garcia said the combined collection of BIR and BOC here has consistently increased in the last four years, showing growing profitability among Freeport-registered locators.

SBMA records indicated that the two agencies yielded a combined collection of P5.28 billion in 2008. This increased by 6.18 percent to P5.6 billion in 2009; by 19.25 percent to P6.68 billion in 2010; by 8.14 percent to P7.22 billion in 2011; and by 5.42 percent to P7.62 billion last year.

During the same period in review, the BIR alone collected a total of P1.29 billion from income, value-added, percentage and other taxes, with a 16.22-percent surplus over the 2011 collection record of P1.11 million.

The BIR collections included a portion of the five-percent corporate tax levied on the annual gross income of Subic-registered locator companies. The three percent of the five-percent corporate tax that the BIR collected from January to December 2012 reached P205.33 million.

BIR’s peak monthly performance was recorded in April 2012 when its collection reached P139.43 million. However, the BIR fell short of its goal of P1.3 billion by 1.21 percent.

Meanwhile, the Port of Subic-BOC posted collections worth P6.33 billion in January-December 2012. This record indicated a slight increase of 3.47 percent over the P6.12-billion customs harvest in 2011.

Subic-BOC also posted non-cash collections worth P491.22 million from government-to-government transactions.

Garcia expressed optimism that this year, more businesses will invest in the Subic Bay Freeport, thus paving the way for more business activities, employment opportunities, and tax returns. (RFD/MPD-SBMA)