While
President Aquino and his Bureau of Customs have moronically focused on opening
OFWs balikbayan boxes to squeeze more revenues, smuggling by big-time traders
has exploded to unprecedented levels under this regime.
Nearly one-fourth of imports into the
country in the last five years have been unreported and untaxed, totaling $94
billion – for an astronomical P4 trillion. That’s more than four times the
estimated smuggled value of just $21 billion from 2005 to 2009.
The Aquino government lost revenues from duties and value-added taxes on these smuggled goods in
the last five years, totaling P760 billion, as a result of the massive
collusion between traders and the Bureau of Customs, the likes of which had
never been seen in the country’s postwar history.
To give you an idea of the magnitude of those P760
billion foregone revenues, that could have doubled the budget of the public
works department to start the building of two MRT-type of mass transport
systems to solve the horrendous traffic problem in the metropolis.
Alternatively, it could have doubled the education department’s budget so that
the poor will enjoy totally free education.
Aquino’s failure to curb corruption is one of his
biggest sins against the nation, which remarkably though he has been able to
keep largely unnoticed.
These figures are based on data from the International
Monetary Fund’s Direction of Trade Statistics, which allows us to compare
exports to the country as reported by the exporting country, and the
Philippines’ imports, as reported by the Bureau of Customs, to come up with an
estimate the value of smuggled goods.
The discrepancies in the two sets of figures may in
part be due to reporting errors, for instance due to different reporting times.
However, especially when the discrepancies involve significant amounts and when
a time-series is available, the methodology approximates the magnitude of
smuggling in a country. The methodology has been routinely used by
international-trade economists and multilateral institutions.
The validity of the method is such that other the
import figures for other countries known to be relatively free of smuggling –
such as Europe and Saudi Arabia– do not show such massive discrepancies. (Read
the note at the end of this column if you’re interested in the details of this
methodology).
The accompanying table and chart show that the
estimated value of goods smuggled into the country jumped as soon as Aquino
took office, rocketing in 2009 from just $8 billion in 2009 or just 15 percent
of the imports as reported by the exporting countries to $26 billion last year,
more than a fourth of the actual imports.
“It’s the biggest open secret in Manila,” a veteran
broker put it. “Biggest as I’ve never seen such blatant smuggling ever in my 30
years in this business. Open because we brokers all know it and how to do it.
And secret, as this government has managed to keep under the public radar, what
is really their biggest racket.”
The broker added “Just go to Divisoria or any mall, or
any supermarket, and you won’t have a doubt at all that smuggling has been so
rampant under this administration. It’s been institutionalized.”
“I don’t mind, of course,” he quipped with a smile..
“A Johnny Walker Black 1-liter costs $55 (P2,400 at P44 to $1) in places I’ve
visited abroad. Here a popular supermarket sells it for just a bit less than
P1,000.”
Notes on the Estimates
The estimates on smuggling are based on data from the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) Direction of Trade Statistics (DOTS), which starting this year were made available by the IMF without charge, and can be accessed through their website.
The estimates on smuggling are based on data from the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) Direction of Trade Statistics (DOTS), which starting this year were made available by the IMF without charge, and can be accessed through their website.
The DOTS provides two sets of data. The first set has
the value of export to the Philippines, as reported, for example, by China. The
second set of data has the value of imports from China as reported by the
Philippines.
To compare the two sets of data, economists use
various formulas, the simplest of which involves reducing the export value by
10 percent to account for the cost of freight, insurance and other shipment
costs. The difference between the exports of China, less freight and insurance
and other costs, and the Philippine reports of its imports from that country
represents the estimates of smuggled, i.e., unreported goods.
The foregone revenues are computed as follows. First,
the import duty is applied on the value of estimated value of smuggled goods,
converted into Philippine pesos. I used a very low 6 percent duty, which is the
average weighted duty on all imports of the country. The value of the shipment
plus the duty is then used to compute the 12 percent value added tax, which is
actually the bigger cost for imports now even as the country has been lowering
its duties to comply with the WTO and ASEAN commitments.
When I first estimated smuggling under Aquino using
IMF data when I was still a columnist of the Philippine Daily Inquirer
(“Smuggling at its worst under Aquino,” November 12, 2012) then BOC head Ruffy
Biazon replied, also printed by the Inquirer: “What may be reported by China as
an export to the Philippines may not be reported by the Philippines as an
import if it is [sic meant for the Freeport Zones and Economic Zones which
utilize imported products in the production of goods which do not enter the
domestic market for local consumption.”
In my reply to his letter (“Biazon doesn’t understand
arithmetic”) I quoted BOC operating procedures which plainly showed that while
it doesn’t collect duties in such zones, it was required to report the dutiable
values to our statistics office, and that such imports to duty-free zones are
included in our trade figures. No wonder he couldn’t run the BOC properly and
got booted out. He didn’t even know what he was supposed to monitor.
By Bobi
Tiglao Manila Times
No comments:
Post a Comment