Invalidated tax credits of textile firms now at P3.4-B

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The Commission on Audit (COA) has uncovered another set of illegal tax perks worth P390.04 million that were granted to textile companies from 2008 to 2014, bringing the current total of invalidated tax credit certificates (TCCs) received by these unscrupulous firms to P3.41 billion.

A report by the COA Special Audits Office to Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III dated Nov. 17 said the new set of disallowed TCCs were worth P214.38 million, which were granted to Primeknit Manufacturing Corp. (PMC); and P175.66 million, which were given to Tai-Cheng Integrated Resource Inc. (TICIRI).

These were on top of the previous batches of TCCs received by textile firms worth P3.018 billion that the COA had invalidated.

The illegal TCCs were issued between 2008 and 2014 by the One-Stop-Shop Inter-Agency Tax Credit and Duty Drawback Center (OSS) that is attached to the Department of Finance (DOF).

Aside from PMC and TICIRI, the other errant textile firms with invalidated TCCs are Silvertex Weaving Corp. (SWC), Knitech Manufacturing Inc. (KMI), Capital-Roll Knit Corp. (CRC), Uni-Glory’s Knitting Corp. (UKC), Miskhu Industrial Corp. (MIC), and Universal Pacific Knitting Mills Inc. (UPKM).

SWC continues to top the list with the largest amount of illegal TCCs at P906.80 million.

CRC’s illegal TCCs amount to P664.92 million, while MIC’s total P451.98 million.

PMC’s invalidated tax credits now total P526.46 million, while those issued to TICIRI now amount to P374.47 million.

Aside from these textile companies, the COA has so far issued Notices of Disallowance (NDs) to the following firms with their corresponding amounts of illegally issued TCCs: KMI, with P114.20 million; UPKM, P127.81 million; and UKC, P241.68 million.

Several past officials and employees of the DOF, Board of Investments (BOI), Bureau of Customs (BOC), and OSS who were responsible for processing and approving the illegal TCCs issued over the 2008-2014 period, as well as the recipients and claimants from the six companies, were held liable by COA.

Approved applications referred to tax credits on the duties and taxes that exporters supposedly paid, and which they could then use to pay other tax liabilities due to the government.

The practice of these alleged exporters who illegally obtained TCCs was to sell the OSS-issued certificates or tax credits to other companies at a discount, who would then use the TCCs to settle their own tax liabilities.

The COA found that the OSS had issued TCCs to either ghost exporters or to real companies that were not in the export trade or who were nonetheless not qualified for the tax credits issued to them, such as these six textile companies.

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