By: Roy Stephen C. Canivel - 05:20 AM January 12, 2018
https://business.inquirer.net/243952/hike-coal-tax-not-affect-prices-basic-goods-says-dti
The excise tax on coal would have a
direct impact on the price of cement, but should have no effect on the prices
of basic goods and commodities even if the tax would affect the cost of
electricity, a key trade official said.
Trade Undersecretary for consumer
protection Ruth Castelo said this was because, compared to other commodities,
cement was heavily dependent on coal, which would now be slapped with higher
excise taxes.
“For other commodities, it’s (coal)
part of operating expenses as indirect costs. Thus, it is excluded in the
computation of the product cost,” she told the Inquirer in a text message.
Data from the Department of Trade
and Industry (DTI) showed that only cement would have a price increase
exceeding P1 per bag.
A 40-kilogram bag of cement
currently has a suggested retail price (SRP) of P205. The excise taxes would
increase the SRP by P1.57 to P206.57, the data showed.
Because of a DTI policy that allows
manufacturers the freedom to set the SRPs, the increase could be bigger.
However, Trade Secretary Ramon Lopez said the price increase should be “justifiable.”
However, Trade Secretary Ramon Lopez said the price increase should be “justifiable.”
In spite of concerns raised by
industry groups, the TRAIN law was enacted late last year. It lowered the
personal income tax of many Filipinos but increased consumption taxes on cars,
coal, fuel, sweetened beverages, among others.
In the case of coal, the TRAIN law
raised the excise tax from P10 to P50 per ton this year. This would increase to
P100 per ton next year and to P150 per ton in 2020.
The DTI official’s statement was
made to allay fears of the public that that the various excise taxes introduced
by TRAIN would cause big increases in the prices of basic goods and
commodities.
Upon making the necessary
computations, DTI officials said that apart from directly affected commodities
such as cars and sweetened beverages, the effect on other goods should be
minimal.
This is because the excise taxes
would only have a small impact on the distribution costs of companies, the
latter accounting for less than 5 percent of the overall production cost, Lopez
said in a previous interview.
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