NO to TEXT TAX!
Information
Category:
Common Interest - Beliefs & Causes
Description:
The BLAS F. OPLE Policy Center and other OFW groups call on all consumers, OFWs and OFW families to sign up and join us in protesting the House proposal to impose a five-centavo tax on every text message.

We object to this measure on the following grounds:

1. Once a tax is imposed, the only way for it to go is up! Remember EVAT! From 10% to 12% and even when the entire country was reeling from the high costs of crude oil, the government refused to suspend or temporarily lower the EVAT on oil... (read more)
Privacy Type:
Open: All content is public.

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Basic Info
 

Name:
NO to TEXT TAX!
Category:
Common Interest - Beliefs & Causes
Description:
The BLAS F. OPLE Policy Center and other OFW groups call on all consumers, OFWs and OFW families to sign up and join us in protesting the House proposal to impose a five-centavo tax on every text message.

We object to this measure on the following grounds:

1. Once a tax is imposed, the only way for it to go is up! Remember EVAT! From 10% to 12% and even when the entire country was reeling from the high costs of crude oil, the government refused to suspend or temporarily lower the EVAT on oil... (read more)
Privacy Type:
Open: All content is public.

Contact Info
 

Email:
Website:
http://www.oplecenter.org
Location:
Pasig, Philippines

Recent News
 

News:
House panel approves 5-centavo tax per text message
By Perseus Echeminada (The Philippine Star) Updated September 09, 2009 12:00 AM

MANILA, Philippines - The House ways and means committee approved yesterday a proposal to impose a five-centavo tax on text messages.

Antique Rep. Exequiel Javier, committee chairman, told reporters that it is the millions of cellular phone subscribers, not telecommunications companies (telcos), who will absorb the proposed tax.

“This is a pass-on levy, since it is a business cost. Otherwise, it is business (referring to telcos) that will suffer,” he said.

But the approved measure is likely to face rough sailing in the plenary as Speaker Prospero Nograles expressed his opposition to taxing text messages.

“We will not allow any such additional taxes on the shoulders of the public,” Nograles said.


Javier said the proposed tax would make cellular phone subscribers poorer by P36 billion a year.

He said proceeds from the levy would be used exclusively for education.

He added that his committee would submit its report to the House next week and that he expects the chamber to approve his panel’s recommendation soon.

Two congressmen, Eric Singson of Ilocos Sur and Danilo Suarez of Quezon, introduced similar bills on the imposition of a five-centavo text tax.

(excerpt from a philstar news report)