By:
Ben O. de Vera - 05:48 AM August 03, 2018
The
government plans to slap royalty on all mining operations under the proposed
tax package 2 Plus.
Documents
obtained by the Inquirer showed that the Department of Finance had proposed to
impose royalty on mining contractors for all metallic and nonmetallic mining
operations, whether small- or large-scale.
At
present, a royalty is imposed only on mine sites that were declared mineral
reservations.
For
operations within mineral reservations, the plan is to levy royalty equivalent
to 5 percent of the market value of the gross output of the mineral products
extracted or produced, exclusive of all other taxes.
For
mining operations outside mineral reservations, the proposal sets the royalty
at 3 percent yearly during the first three years, 4 percent on the fourth year
and 5 percent beginning the fifth year onward.
Mining
contractors will also pay an “additional government share” when the basic
government share consisting of direct taxes, royalties, fees and other related
payments amount to less than 50 percent of their net mining revenues.
Based
on the DOF proposal, the additional government share would be equivalent to
“the difference between the 50 percent of net mining revenue and the basic
government share during the calendar year.”
The
net mining revenue is derived by deducting expenses from gross output.
Also,
the new mining tax regime will impose limitations on mining contractors’
interest expense deductions, depending on the debt-to-equity ratio.
A
debt-to-equity ratio of 1.5:1 for an income year will not allow a deduction for
the interest paid on the part of the debt that exceeded the ratio.
For
a ratio exceeding 1.5:1 for a taxable year, meanwhile, the deduction will be
disallowed if the amount of a contractor’s debt does not surpass the “arm’s
length debt value.”
Besides
the new mining taxes, package 2 Plus also slaps higher excise taxes on tobacco
and alcohol products, and stops the sale of “loose”/per-stick cigarettes and
e-cigarettes.
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