Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez, on Monday (July 1), expressed confidence that the other programs of the Duterte administration’s complete tax reform program could sail easily through the 18th Congress, as fears of a backlash from the electorate were proven incorrect with the aid of the outcomes of the May 13 midterm elections. Dominguez started the election victories of proponents and supporters in Congress of the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN) law showed support, no longer opposition to, the management’s tax reforms.
During its first 3 years in the workplace, the Duterte management managed to bypass two tax reform packages—the TRAIN Law that took effect in the closing year, and part of bundle 1B through Republic Act (RA) No. 11213 or the Tax Amnesty Act of 2019. According to Dominguez, the remaining three years of the administration might also see an acceleration of President Rodrigo Duterte’s more than P3-trillion “Build, Build, Build” infrastructure campaign to push every year’s monetary boom to a perfect eight percent.
The government, Dominguez added, might also increase overseas direct investments and employment, similarly enhance enforcement of modern-day reforms, and enhance agricultural productivity. HOWEVER, the TRAIN Law slashed private earnings tax charges; however, it jacked up excise on the consumption of cigarettes, oil merchandise, sugary beverages, and automobiles, among other goods and services. The pending tax reforms included the remainder of package deal 1B, as a way to jack up charges of motor vehicle user’s price and additionally implement a preferred tax amnesty law which hinges on the lifting of bank secrecy in fraud cases and automatic change of records for tax purposes with the Philippines’ treaty partners.







