Philippines; Selected Issues
This article is an empirical analysis on tax collections in the Philippines. The tax system is characterized by a rule of tax incentives provided by 13 investment agencies. Tax collections showed regular growth. The GDP ratio increased from 12.1 percent (2009) to 12.8 percent (2012), but the revenue-to-GDP ratio was low to fill large gaps for education, health, and infrastructure; therefore the authorities encompassed the sin taxes (alcohol and tobacco excises). The most important source of income for the Philippines is the labor export. This large-scale labor emigration fetches a sufficient amount of annual inflows of more than 9 percent of GDP.
Year of publication: |
2013-04-18
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Institutions: | International Monetary Fund (IMF) ; International Monetary Fund |
Subject: | Tax collection | Tax revenues | Revenue mobilization | Tax policy | Workers remittances | Capital inflows | Business cycles | Selected issues | Philippines | tax base | tax collections | tax revenue | tax rates | tax administration | tax structures | tax incentives | tax ratio | tax bases | tax system | fiscal sustainability | taxpayer registration | fiscal deficit | tax policy reform | fiscal affairs | fiscal strategy | budget balances | tax performance | tax effort | structural fiscal | tax burden | fiscal incentives | local taxes | taxation |
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