WITH most students attending classes this month, a senior lawmaker on Sunday urged Congress to work overtime to pass corrective legislation defining the tax rates for proprietary schools and allowing them to enjoy a 1-percent preferential tax rate until June 30, 2023.
Camarines Sur Rep. Luis Raymund F. Villafuerte Jr. admitted the bill will not be passed on time. Hence, he called on his colleagues to at least pass it in September at the latest.
He added the corrective legislation will spell “big relief” for schools and will hopefully enable them to keep their teachers and even hire new ones for the coming school year.
“The House leadership should hold meetings via Zoom so lawmakers can work on priority measures like the substitute bill correcting the tax rates for proprietary schools, as well as the 2022 budget and a possible new set of Covid response measures amid the ECQ [enhanced community quarantine] in Metro Manila and selected parts of the country to contain the surge of the more contagious Delta variant,” he said.
Villafuerte is among the principal authors of House Bill 9913. That bill seeks to clarify Section 27 (B) of the Tax Code by specifying the tax rates on proprietary educational institutions and non-profit hospitals.
“Section 27 (B) of the National Internal Revenue Code (NIRC) creates an ambiguity as to whom the preferential tax rates apply to. Specifically, as to the qualifications, i.e. proprietary and nonprofit. An effective tax administration system is one that is clear and unambiguous and can easily be followed by both the tax office and the taxpayer,” he said.
The Lower Chamber already approved the bill on second reading.
“To remedy this ambiguity and protect the Constitutional mandate of incentivizing proprietary educational institutions, this measure seeks to amend Sec. 27(B) to clearly indicate that the preferential tax rate shall apply to: a. all proprietary educational institutions, including those that are stock and for profit: and b. nonprofit hospitals,” Villafuerte added.
HB 9913 was in response to the plea of the Coordinating Council of Private Educational Associations of the Philippines (COCOPEA), following a recent regulation issued by the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) increasing the tax rate of private educational institutions to 25 percent from 10 percent.
The BIR had issued Revenue Regulation (RR) 5-2021 based on the condition that proprietary educational institutions must be “nonprofit” to enjoy the reduced rate of 1 percent as a result of the passage of the Corporate Recovery and Tax Incentives for Enterprises, or Create, law.
Amid appeals from the Cocopea, other school-based groups and lawmakers, the BIR subsequently issued RR 14-2021 suspending the previous regulation.
“We hope that the bill will be passed soon and signed into law so that private schools now reeling from the impact of the pandemic would be able to continue operating and hire more teachers and support staff that are badly needed now that we are seeing another school year with classes that are likely to be conducted mostly online,” the lawmaker said.
Villafuerte, however, expressed concern over the certainty that the passage of the bill, along with the deliberations on other priority measures, such as the 2022 national budget, would be delayed if the House leadership insists on stopping all work in the chamber altogether while Metro Manila is under ECQ.