This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 47, January 8-14, 2006
E-VAT on Electricity:
Short-circuiting the People’s Interest
At an average of 70 centavos
per kwh and a total sale of about 24 billion kwh, electricity users in the
Meralco franchise area will be contributing to the government a total of P17
billion every year. The government collects additional billions from the more
than 120 electric utilities and electric coops in the country. It should be
obvious why the Arroyo administration just have to impose the tax on power.
By
Mon Ramirez
Upon the passage of the Value Added Tax (VAT)
law, the Arroyo administration assured the public that the imposition of VAT on
power will have very minimal impact on our electric bill. True to its form, the
Arroyo administration has been caught lying again with the latest electric bill.
Taxed items are in abundance in the new electric
bill. Clearly itemized are the E-VAT on the generation, transmission, system
loss and power act reduction charges, which ranges from 6.44 percent to 7.96
percent. Hidden under the item “VAT for dist & subs” is the 10 percent E-VAT on
the other charges - distribution, supply, retail customer, metering system,
lifeline rate subsidy, interclass subsidy, Current Exchange Rate Adjustment (CERA),
and local franchise tax. Possibly afraid of pushing its luck too far, the Arroyo
administration has not yet taxed the two remaining cost items, namely, our
forced contributions to the missionary electricity and environmental funds,
which are in reality taxes disguised as contributions.
The table below are the actual charges and VAT
for a consumption of 138 kwh:
Kwh consumption, kwh
138
Cost items
Rate
Total
VAT
1
Generation charge
4.7564
656.38
42.27
2
Transmission charge
0.7716
106.48
7.40
3
Systems loss charge
0.7349
101.42
6.61
4
Power Act Reduction
-0.1140
-15.73
-1.25
5
Distribution charge
0.5729
79.06
7.91
6
Supply charge
0.5271
72.74
7.27
7
Retail customer charge
5
5.00
0.50
8
Metering system charge
0.2435
33.60
3.36
9
Lifeline rate subsidy
0.1125
15.53
1.55
10
Interclass subsidy
-0.2139
-29.52
-2.95
11
CERA (applied on distribution, Item #5)
11.87%
9.38
0.94
12
Local franchise tax (applied to Items 1 to
11)
0.57%
5.90
0.59
13
VAT for dist & subs (sum of VAT for items
#5 to #12): P19.17
10.00%
14
Missionary
0.0373
5.15
15
Environmental fund
0.0025
0.35
16
VAT backbilling
17.38
17
Franchise tax backbilling
-19.04
TOTAL BILL AMOUNT
1,026.70
91.58
TOTAL CURRENT AMOUNT
1,118.28
Effective power rate,
8.10
Up from P7.82 of previous month
Evat
9%
EVAT per kwh
0.66
pesos/kwh
The strange thing about the latest electric bill
is that after slapping the electricity users with a local franchise tax of 0.57
percent on all the cost items, the Arroyo administration proceeds to impose a
VAT on that tax! Meralco was awarded the franchise and enjoys the profit from it
but it is the consumers who pay the tax on Meralco’s franchise; and the
government taxes the payment for the franchise tax. Consumers reluctantly pay
their electric bills only because they do not want to live in darkness, at least
for now.
The EVAT has increased the residential electric
bill by 9 percent.The E-VAT for customers in the 101-200 kwh category is 66
centavos per kwh. That is just another way of saying that to exercise their
basic right to use electricity they have to pay the Arroyo administration 66
centavos per kwh. For customers in the 201-300 kwh category, it is 72 centavos.
It is higher for those consuming more.
There are a few interesting items in the way the
government, through the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC), applied the EVAT on
power.
For example, consumers are charged the systems
loss, an amount consumers pay for electricity lost by Meralco because of
pilferage and technical and administrative inefficiency. Some people steal
electricity, government allows Meralco to make the honest customers pay for the
loss, and the government joins in by taxing the same honest customers who have
been made to pay by Meraco for the theft by other people to the tune of 6.52
percent of the systems loss. One’s faith in justice is certainly tested to the
limit when one realizes what is going on here.
Customers donate
Customers pay – or, more accurately, donate -
the 11.25 centavos per kwh lifeline rate subsidy to enable Meralco to give
discounts ranging from 20 percent to 50 percent to poorer customers without
Meralco losing money yet looking good before them because it does not say it
collects from other customers to give to the poor. The funny thing is that even
this forced generosity is taxed 10 percent. The Arroyo government just cannot
resist the temptation to collect more money from electricity users, yet
donations by wealthy people and rich corporations are tax-deductible.
The government also collects a 10 percent tax
from electricity consumers on the CERA which is another tax item that is
difficult to understand. Electric utilities borrow money or buy spare parts and
materials abroad, and the CERA is an automatic cost-recovery formula that allows
them to pass on to their customers the additional cost whenever the peso
depreciates. Currently the CERA is 11.87 percent of the distribution charge.
The government imposes the 10 percent EVAT on the CERA charge. Why should
customers be charged a 10 percent tax on the CERA when they are even paying the
cost of peso depreciation passed on to them by Meralco? They are already helping
the company recover their losses from peso devaluation, yet we are taxed in the
process.
But there are two bright spots in this EVAT
thing. For example, consumers enjoy a discount of 21.39 centavos per kwh called
inter-class subsidy as mandated by EPIRA which should have been removed last
October 2005. Meralco promptly recovers the discount by collecting from its
commercial and industrial customers. Residential consumers also enjoy a power
act reduction discount of 11.40 centavos per kwh, a loss which Napocor absorbs
as mandated by EPIRA. The people at ERC automatically imposes a 10 percent tax
on both items..
Fortunately for consumers, the laws of
mathematics are strictly observed by the computers at Meralco. Since each item
is preceded by minus signs, the result of the 10 percent multiplication process
on each item is also negative; consumers therefore pay a negative tax, which in
the real world translates to an additional discount. Computer algorithm gives
customers a few joys in this new year. Did the ERC people miss this? Congress
should enact more laws that confuse the ERC people and benefit the people.
How much will the government earn from the VAT?
At an average of 70 centavos per kwh and a total sale of about 24 billion kwh,
electricity users in the Meralco franchise area will be contributing to the
government a total of P17 billion every year. The government collects additional
billions from the more than 120 electric utilities and electric coops in the
country. It should be obvious why, despite the strong protests from the people,
the Arroyo administration just have to impose the tax on power.
Meantime, some people hope that the money taken
from almost empty pockets are spent wisely by the government, a phenomenon that
has not been seen for a long, long time. But sometimes miracles reportedly
happen once in a great while. Bulatlat © 2006 Bulatlat
■
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Contributed to Bulatlat
Pesos per kwh