By: Karl R. Ocampo - 05:32 AM
November 24, 2018
The Mines and Geosciences Bureau
(MGB) and the inter-agency Mining Industry Coordinating Council (MICC) will be
recommending the lifting of the suspension on the issuance of new mining
permits once the second package of the administration’s tax reform is
implemented.
Speaking to reporters on the
sidelines of the Philippine Mine Safety and Environment Association conference
in Baguio City, MGB director Wilfredo Moncano said the additional taxes to be
imposed on mining firms were already enough to fulfill the condition of an
executive order on the suspension on the issuance of new mining permits.
Under Executive Order 79 issued by
former President Benigno Aquino III, the issuance of new Mining Production
Sharing Agreements (MPSAs) would remain suspended until a new revenue-sharing
scheme has taken effect.
Since the first package of the Tax
Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN) law doubled the excise tax on
mining operations to 4 percent from 2 percent, MGB and the mining groups,
started lobbying for the lifting of the moratorium.
But according to Moncano, the
Department of Finance wants to include royalty payments in the sector’s
taxation scheme before the moratorium is lifted.
In a separate interview, MGB assistant
director Danilo Uykieng said the DOF wanted to impose a higher tax rate on
mining, “preferably 10 percent.”
The second package of the TRAIN
law—which was passed in the House and now pending in the Senate—proposes a
5-percent royalty on all mining operations, even those outside mineral
reservation areas, or higher than MGB’s recommendation of 3 percent.
Royalties are originally slapped on
mineral reservation areas only since the government spends considerable amount
of funds to explore these properties itself.
With the doubling of the excise tax
to 4 percent and the proposal of royalty fees at 5 percent, the mining industry
stands to pay the government 9 percent in taxes.
Moncano said the two tax reforms
should be enough grounds for the industry to ask for the lifting of the
suspension on the issuance of new mining permits.
He added that non-metallic mines
operators were wary the new tax scheme would be inflationary since companies
that could not bear the additional tax might need to pass it on to consumers.
Non-metallic mines produce materials for construction such as cement, sand and
gravel.
Chamber of Mines of the Philippines
chair and Nickel Asia Corp. president Gerard H. Brimo earlier said the
additional 5 percent royalty might also run the risk of mines closing down,
noting that this would make mining operations “too expensive.”
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