Tag: Philippines

  • Philippines Looks to Tighten Vape Import Laws 

    Philippines Looks to Tighten Vape Import Laws 

    Potential new requirements have been drafted in an administrative order to tighten measures against the illegal trade of vape products, promote consumer safety, and streamline import procedures in the Philippines. Today (March 10), the Department of Trade and Industry asked the public and stakeholders to help provide insights for its amended documentary requirements in the issuance of a Statement of Confirmation (SOC) for product importers. The SOC is a mandatory certification that verifies the legitimacy and compliance of imported vape products and tobacco items.

    In the proposed order, importers would need to submit an expanded set of documents consisting of a packing list, commercial invoice, bill of lading/airway bill, production batch details, and a valid Philippine Standard License. Additional compliance requirements include a P150,000 ($2,550) surety bond, a valid certificate of registration from the Bureau of Customs, proof of billing and ownership, or lease of warehouse space, and an excise tax return with a Bureau of Internal Revenue stamp.

  • Philippines to Align Cigarette and Vape Taxes 

    Philippines to Align Cigarette and Vape Taxes 

    The Philippines’ Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) said it plans to balance taxes on vape products and traditional cigarettes this year to boost collection. It currently charges P63 ($1.07) in taxes per pack of 20 cigarettes and for every 10 ml of classic nicotine liquids, but other vape devices are charged higher at P109.20 ($1.86) for 2 ml salt nicotine pods. From January to November 2024, the government collected P128.98 billion ($2.2 billion) in taxes from tobacco and P1.35 billion ($23 million) from vape products.

    BIR Commissioner Romeo Lumagui Jr. said that aligning tax rates for both products is a priority for the BIR to maximize collections from the tobacco and vape industries. “I think it will happen this year,” he said. “There will be an improvement, and the drag down of excise taxes on tobacco and vape will not be that big.”

    Lumagui also said the BIR will be destroying confiscated cigarettes nationwide, with vape products to be destroyed once they are inventoried.

  • Relx WeCreate Gets Approval in Philippines

    Relx WeCreate Gets Approval in Philippines

    Relx announced that its new WeCreate closed pod system gained approval to carry the Philippine Product Standard Mark. RELX says the WeCreate is a breakthrough in customizable vaping technology, blending precision design with advanced features. It has an 800mAh battery that can provide between seven and 15 days of usage on a single charge, a USB Type-C charging port, an adjustable airflow system, and a smart display that “provides real-time information on battery status and other essential details, ensuring users remain informed and in control.”

    The RELX WeCreate offers 14 distinctive pod flavors, each designed to complement the device’s advanced technology.

  • Philippines: Tobacco Orgs Backing Tax Moratorium

    Philippines: Tobacco Orgs Backing Tax Moratorium

    Seeking a “sweet spot,” the Philippines’ government is considering a moratorium on tobacco excise tax hikes in order to curb illicit trade and protect its revenue. Currently, the excise tax is P60 ($1.03) per pack and grows 5% annually. A pack of illicit cigarettes can be purchased for P40 ($0.69) per pack, less than the tax itself.

    According to the Food and Nutrition Research Institute, smoking in the country increased from 18.5% in 2021 to 23.2% in 2023. Over the same period, illicit cigarettes increased 13.6% to 19.8%. Despite the increase in smoking, the Bureau of Internal Revenue has watched its collected excise taxes steadily decline each year, going from P176.48 billion ($3 billion) in 2021 to P134 billion ($2.3 billion) last year, P51 billion below budget.

    “Illicit trade thrives due to the availability of untaxed cigarettes sold at a fraction of legitimate products,” said Jericho Nograles, president of the Philippine Tobacco Institute (PTI). “Legal cigarettes are up to five times more expensive than their illicit counterparts.”

    Both the PTI and the National Tobacco Administration (NTA) supported the tax moratorium for 2026, saying it is a “practical” and “targeted” solution against illicit cigarette trade.

    “By pausing the excise tax increase for 2026, we can temporarily stabilize the market and reduce the price disparity between legitimate and illicit cigarettes,” NTA administrator and CEO Belinda Sanchez said. “This pause will help legitimate manufacturers regain competitiveness, which is crucial to restoring demand for locally produced tobacco leaf for local consumption.

    “The widening gap between the prices of legitimate and illicit cigarettes, aggravated by successive excise tax increases, has incentivized the proliferation of smuggled and counterfeit products.”

    While the moratorium has been discussed for some time, the House of Representatives recently passed on second reading House Bill 11360, which would replace the moratorium and instead impose lower tax rates on tobacco products, proposing a schedule where the excise tax is raised 2% in even-numbered years and 4% in odd.

    Pointing to the billions they are losing in revenue, Department of Finance Secretary Ralph Recto said they are open to all proposals and “hopes the government can find a sweet spot.”

  • Philippines Approves Tobacco Tracking Bill

    Philippines Approves Tobacco Tracking Bill

    To deter illicit nicotine products, the House of Representatives in the Philippines approved a measure to introduce a track-and-trace system for tobacco products. Under HB 11286, cigarettes, vapes, and tobacco products would need to be affixed with a stamp that has “physical or digital features,” while requiring companies to register equipment needed in making cigarettes and electronic vapes with the government.

    “The illicit tobacco trade in our country is alarming,” Rep. Ray Florence T. Reyes, who sponsored the measure, said. “One in five sticks of cigarettes did not pass the quality control and is more likely to cause death. “These unregulated products expose consumers to greater health risks.”

    Meanwhile, the House Ways and Means panel is eyeing an annually alternating tax rate hike scheme on cigarette products, while also tweaking the tax rate over all tobacco products. HB 11360 seeks to implement an odd-and-even numbered tax rate increase for cigarettes to curb the surge of illicit tobacco products in the Philippines.

    “The rate of tax imposed shall be increased by 2% every even-numbered year effective on Jan. 1, 2026, and 4% every odd-numbered year, effective on Jan. 1, 2027,” the bill stated, changing the tax rate structure across all tobacco products.

     “The increase shall be implemented until Dec. 31, 2035, provided that after the 10-year period, a review of the tax imposed and its impact on revenue collections, health costs, and prevalence of smoking shall be conducted.”

    Discussions over the levied tax rates for cigarettes have taken a front seat at the House tax panel, which is eyeing to reduce excise tax losses over the tobacco industry due to smuggling. Excise tax rates for heated tobacco, cigarettes, and vape products are levied a yearly 5% tax rate increase from 2024, according to the Bureau of Internal Revenue’s (BIR) website.

    “BIR revenue data show that further successive increases in tax rates have failed to result in higher collections,” Euvimil Nina R. Asuncion, revenue operations group director for the Finance department, said. The BIR collected only P134 billion (USD $2.3 billion) of its budgeted P185 billion (USD $3.1 billion) tobacco excise tax in 2024.

    However, Anthony C. Leachon, former Department of Health advisor and convener of health advocacy group Sin Tax Coalition, said the bill would actually lower revenues collected.

    “We project that this will lead to P29 billion of forgone revenue for public health and tobacco farmers from 2026 to 2030 and will make cigarettes and electronic smoking devices more accessible to the youth and the poor,” he said.

  • Philippines: Illicit Trade Hurting Everyone

    Philippines: Illicit Trade Hurting Everyone

    The Senate Committee on Ways and Means said illicit trade has been a major factor in the rise of smoking prevalence in the Philippines and a drop in revenue from excise taxes on tobacco products.

    According to a survey by the Food and Nutrition Research Institute, smoking prevalence in the country rose from 14% in 2021 to 18% in 2023.

    “For almost six years, we reduced smoking prevalence, but in just two years, we’re back to square one,” Senator Sherwin Gatchalian said during the public hearing.

    Meanwhile, revenue from tobacco excise taxes fell from a peak of PHP176 billion (USD$3 billion) in 2021 to PHP134 billion (USD$2.3) in 2023.

    Gatchalian, who chairs the panel, attributed this to a rise in illicit trade, with data from Kantar showing illegal cigarettes now account for 16% of the market, up from 5% in 2021.

    “Illicit trade undermines our efforts,” he said, underscoring the need to address revenue leakages by curbing illicit trade. “These products evade taxes and make cigarettes more accessible, promoting smoking among our people.”

    Tobacco products are among eight excisable items in the country, along with alcohol, vapor products, petroleum, automobiles, non-essential goods and services, sugar-sweetened beverages, and mineral products.

    The survey also revealed a rise in the use of e-cigarettes among adolescents, with usage skyrocketing from 7.5% in 2021 to 39.9% in 2023.

  • Philippines: Industry Advocates Tax Moratorium to Curb Smuggling

    Philippines: Industry Advocates Tax Moratorium to Curb Smuggling

    The Philippine Tobacco Institute (PTI) has proposed a pause in excise tax hikes on tobacco, arguing it would deter consumers from buying smuggled cigarettes and stabilize prices for legitimate products. PTI President Jericho B. Nograles highlighted this during a Senate hearing on the illicit tobacco trade, suggesting that a moratorium could also bolster enforcement efforts against smuggling.

    Currently, excise taxes in the Philippines are set at P60 per pack of cigarettes, with vape products taxed at P54.60 (US$0.93) per milliliter for salt nicotine and P63 per 10 milliliters for classic nicotine. Despite collecting P130.91 (US$ 2.24bn) billion in tobacco excise taxes in the first 11 months of 2024, the Bureau of Internal Revenue remains short of its P185.34 billion target for the year.

    Nograles pointed to Singapore’s tax moratorium as a successful precedent and urged the government to simplify the tax system by standardizing rates for all vapor products. He also called for aggressive action from the Department of Justice against smugglers and illicit traders.

    Additionally, Republic Act No. 12022, signed into law by President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr., classifies agricultural smuggling, hoarding, and profiteering as acts of economic sabotage. Violators face severe penalties, including life imprisonment and fines up to five times the value of smuggled goods.

    Nograles emphasized that the illicit tobacco trade undermines legitimate industry players and creates inequities in the market.

  • Philippines Using Drones to Map Plantations

    Philippines Using Drones to Map Plantations

    The Philippines National Tobacco Administration (NTA) has started using drones to map tobacco plantations nationwide, reports The Manila Times.

     According to NTA Administrator and CEO Belinda Sanchez, drone technology is part of a digitalization program that will also help validate tobacco plantation data.

    The drones’ high-resolution aerial imaging and geospatial analysis will accurately measure plantation areas and will help farmers in estimating the volume of production.

    Each of the eight NTA branch offices was issued one DJI Mavic 3 Enterprise Drone while an additional unit was provided to the Farm Technology and Services Department.

    NTA Undersecretary Deogracias Victor Savellano said the use of drones was in line with Agriculture Secretary Francisco Tiu Laurel Jr.’s push for modernization and digitalization in the agency.

    NTA Deputy Administrator for Operations Nestor Casela and Deputy Administrator for Support Services Benedicto Savellano said the technology would help the NTA in ensuring fairness in tobacco plantation validation and enhancing its regulatory ability.

  • Philippine Tobacco Farmers to Receive Cash

    Philippine Tobacco Farmers to Receive Cash

    Photo: PMFTC

    The National Tobacco Administration (NTA) of the Philippines is poised to distribute PHP100 million ($1.73 million) to qualified tobacco farmers nationwide, reports GMA News.

    The organization has identified 16,666 tobacco farmers as recipients of the cash assistance amounting to PHP6,000 each, which will be distributed on or before Dec. 15, 2024.

    The funds are intended to cover tobacco farmer-recipients’ production for cropping year 2024-2025, which began in September 2024 and will conclude by June 2025.

    The NTA said the recipients were identified by the agency’s branch offices based on the guidelines set and approved by the NTA governing board.

    Among the recipients are 9,055 contract growers and 7,611 are non-contract growers.

    The NTA said that beneficiaries of the cash assistance must be registered tobacco farmers with the agency and are personally tilling a tobacco farm “capable of providing adequate labor to attend to all activities in quality tobacco production, able to provide basic farm tools and equipment, such as plow, harrow, sprayer, work animal, irrigation pump, and curing bar/air curing shed, and should have adequate sources of good quality irrigation water and desirable for tobacco production.”

  • President Invited to Address Illicit Trade Forum

    President Invited to Address Illicit Trade Forum

    Image: corund

    President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. has been invited to address the opening day of the National Tobacco Administration’s (NTA) second anti-illicit trade summit, which will take place in Quezon City on Oct. 23- 24. The first event took place in August 2023.

    The summit is expected to attract more than 200 participants from the farming sector, tobacco companies and media outlets, among other stakeholders.

    Anchored on the theme: “Advancing the Local Tobacco Industry and Combating Illicit Trade,” the forum will focus on the ongoing government efforts in the war against illicit tobacco trade in the Philippines.

    “Addressing the illicit tobacco trade requires a whole of national approach, and multi-faceted strategies that include strengthening national policies, enhancing regional cooperation, improving enforcement mechanisms and increasing public awareness,” said NTA Administrator and CEO Belinda S. Sanchez in a statement.

    In recent years, the Philippine tobacco industry has faced significant challenges due to the illicit tobacco trade.

    According to the NTA, the illicit tobacco trade adversely impacts government revenue, public health, national security and farmer livelihoods. The Bureau of Internal Revenue estimates that the national government misses out on up to PHP100 billion ($1.71 billion) annually in tax receipts due to illicit tobacco trade.

    Data from the NTA shows 2.2 million Filipinos financially depend on tobacco, including more than 430,000 farmers, farm workers and their family members.