House Bill (HB) 4144 is beneficial to all, according to one of the salient arguments during the recent Committee of Ways and Means hearing in the Lower House.
“It’s a misconception that HB 4144 only favors one local manufacturer,” Rep. Dakila Cua of Quirino said in the hearing. “Let’s not forget that foreign tobacco companies are also players in the lower-tier market as well.”
Party-list Rep. Lito Atienza of Buhay also supported HB 4144, noting that the wisdom in the proposed amendment lies in its multiple benefits.
He hypothetically raised that “if we consider the “sin” tax on cigarettes, we could consider the same for alcoholic beverages, like San Miguel Beer, and all other intoxicating beverages.”
“Is it possible that the taxation for premium brands, like Hennessy XO, be the same with local brands, like Tanduay or Ginebra San Miguel, to call it a form of unitary tax?”Atienza asked.
He noted that it would immediately kill local brands because the negligible price difference due to a unitary tax system oversimplifies the problem and develops a bias for products of the rich versus products of the less-moneyed sectors of society.
“It’s about time we take a more serious look at sin taxes so that while we promote the objectives of good health, we, at the same time, raise revenue and discourage smoking. Let us not be unfair to our local industries, particularly the farmers and manufacturers,”
Atienza said.
A World Health Organization study on tobacco tax administration indicated that a tiered tax system, be it specific or ad valorem, may be an outcome of various political economic reasons, the most common one being protecting domestic products.
Atienza likened the situation to the plight of the Philippine cigar industry where the country used to be No. 1 until a series of measures that ostensibly would have helped them otherwise killed the cigar industry, now earning substantial global revenues, but without our homegrown Filipino brands being able to compete.
“The proposed amendment gives a second look at the economic situation of our farmers, and at the same time, without forfeiting the objective of discouraging smoking, since higher taxes means less smokers.
I therefore find logic, justice and fairness [to this measure] and we are definitely supporting it,” Atienza emphasized.