British American Tobacco, the world’s second-largest cigarette maker,
has asked the government to remove the preferential treatment the
products of PMFTC Inc. and other old cigarette brands to level the
playing field in the Philippines.
James Lafferty, general manager of British American Tobacco
Philippines, said the company was open to any increase in the excise tax
rates and a change in the structure of the so-called sin taxes if it
would allow new entrants like BAT to do business in the country.
“We just simply want the government to level the battle field in
order for us to destroy the monopoly. Monopoly, as you can see, is never
good for the economy,” Lafferty said referring to PMFTC, which controls
94 percent of the domestic tobacco market.
Old brands under the present excise tax scheme enjoy a preferential
tax treatment, or P12 in excise tax for every P32 pack of cigarette. The
government granted the tax rate on tobacco companies operating in the
country before 1996.
Companies that came in after 1996 like BAT, however, are levied an
excise tax of P28.30 per pack despite selling its cigarettes for P32 a
pack, the same as that of PMFTC.
“If you came in just after 1996, or specifically in 1997, which
happened in our case, we have to pay higher excise tax even if we are
selling the product at the rate of PMFTC,” Lafferty said. “This is the
most unfair thing that I ever seen.”
He also said PMFTC’s claim that cigarette smuggling into the country
would become more prevalent once the higher sin tax rate was in place
was “baseless.” Elaine Ramos Alanguilan
Walang komento:
Mag-post ng isang Komento