Press Release
January 17, 2019

ANGARA SEEKS PASSAGE OF 'GOLD BILL' TO BOOST PH FOREIGN RESERVES

Senator Sonny Angara has called for the swift passage of his bill seeking to boost the country's gross international reserves (GIR) by granting tax exemptions to small-scale miners who would sell their gold to the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP).

"I strongly urge the honorable members of the Philippine Senate to approve the passage of this Gold Bill to ensure the strength of the country's [GIR] and promote the Philippines' greater monetary and external sector stability," Angara, chairman of the Senate Committee on Ways and Means, said in his sponsorship speech on Senate Bill No. 2127.

Under the bill, Sections 32 and 151 of the National Internal Revenue Code will be amended to make the sale of gold from small-scale miners to the BSP exempt from income and excise taxes.

The tax exemptions cover proceeds from "sale of gold to the BSP by registered small-scale miners" and "sale of gold by registered small-scale miners to accredited traders for eventual sale to the BSP."

The proposed legislation, Angara said, is a "win-win" for both the BSP and small-scale miners.

He said the bill would not only allow the BSP to shore up the country's GIR which dropped to a seven-year low in October, but would also help support the development of the small-scale mining industry as envisioned by Republic Act 7076, or the People's Small-Scale Mining Act of 1999.

"The proposed legislation would have the effect of assisting the BSP in the fulfilment of its mandate under its charter, returning to the formal sector the sale of gold from small-scale mining, and support the trade of small-scale miners as originally envisioned under RA 7076," Angara pointed out.

The GIR is the sum of all foreign currencies, including gold, held by the BSP. It serves as a buffer to ensure that the Philippines would not run out of foreign reserves that it could use to pay for imported goods and services, or maturing obligations in case of external shocks.

The BSP has reported that the GIR level last October was $74.8 billion, the lowest since hitting $71.88 billion in July 2011.

Angara said the measure would enable the BSP to better build up the GIR by buying domestically-produced gold from small-scale miners using pesos.

He noted that buying gold from the domestic market would boost the GIR as opposed to purchasing gold using dollars, which affects the money supply with potential inflationary effects.

According to Angara, RA 7076 was enacted to help promote, develop, protect and rationalize viable small-scale mining activities in order to generate more employment opportunities and provide an equitable sharing of the nation's wealth and natural resources.

Section 17 of RA 7076 provides that "all gold produced by small-scale miners in any mineral area shall be sold to the Central Bank, or its duly authorized representative, which shall buy it at prices comparative with those prevailing in the world market regardless of volume or weight."

"The bill also helps small-scale miners, who prefer to sell their gold to the BSP, which ensures that they would be able to receive a fair price for their gold, instead of selling the gold to the black market where prices are below market levels," Angara said.

Angara noted that the volume of gold sold to BSP declined drastically when the central bank started to withhold and remit to the national government the 2 percent excise tax and 5 percent creditable withholding tax on its purchase of gold from small-scale miners and traders, pursuant to a revenue regulation issued by the Bureau of Internal Revenue.

Between 2005 and 2010, the BSP purchased close to 1 million troy ounces of gold produced by small-scale mining activities, or an equivalent of 2,362 gold bars. Following the issuance of BIR Revenue Regulation No. 6-2012, the BSP's gold purchases went down to 35,000 troy ounces in 2012, which continued to decline to merely 14,700 troy ounces in 2017.

As of September 2018, the BSP had purchased an equivalent of only 19 gold bars, roughly the equivalent of 7,600 troy ounces.

Worse, Angara said, the Philippine gold started showing up in the black markets of other countries such as China, Malaysia, Singapore and Indonesia, depriving the domestic economy of the benefits from having the gold kept in the Philippines.

"In short, the huge reduction in the sale of gold to BSP from small-scale mining activities has constrained the BSP from increasing the level of the country's [GIR]," Angara pointed out.

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