LA TRINIDAD, Benguet—Medicines for diabetes and other ailments common to the elderly will soon be exempted from the value-added tax (VAT), thus will be cheaper, a Department of Finance (DOF) official assured locals of this upland region on July 7.
“By January 2019 medicine for diabetes, high cholesterol and hypertension will be VAT-free,” DOF Assistant Secretary Antonio Joselito Lambino II told hundreds of Cordillerans witnessing the launch of the “Biyaya ng Pagbabago” program of the Office of Participatory Government under the Office of the Cabinet Secretary at the Benguet State University.
Lambino said the cheaper medicine would be brought about by the new Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN) law, which allows the government to collect more taxes from other products and services and finance more programs for health, education and social assistance for indigent citizens.
“The exemption on medicines, generally consumed and needed by senior citizens, will be aided with the TRAIN collection,” Lambino said.
The finance official further explained the new TRAIN law that rolled out at the start of 2018 would enable the government to pursue its “Build, Build, Build” program, a massive infrastructure-investment strategy.
He said the “Build, Build, Build” program would create over 93,000 jobs in the country, finance the college education of students in state universities and colleges, subsidize legitimate public-utility vehicle owners and assist hundreds of thousands of poor Filipinos.
Cabinet Secretary Leoncio Evasco said the “Biyaya ng Pagbabago” program aims to bring to the grassroots the programs and services of the Duterte administration, which targets to bring down the poverty level in the country from the present 21 percent to 14 percent in 2022.