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Monday, May 20, 2024

‘Feesbook’ to cut  red tape proposed

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Since the  government  will  collect around P40 billion from  “fees and charges” for permits and licenses next year, Senate President Pro Tempore Ralph G. Recto wants to publish them  online  in the form of “Feesbook”   to cut red tape.

The   cost and time needed to get the documents should also be detailed on the Feesbook account, Recto said.

It should be explained on Feesbook “how much and how long” it would take a citizen to secure permits and licenses, the senator said.

A Feesbook, he added, could also reduce  red tape, which, according to a World Bank report issued last October, cost  the country P140 billion in opportunity losses annually.  

While some agencies have posted the cost of documents they issue on their websites, Recto noted that there is still “no unified sourcebook” as to the schedule of fees agencies are charging for their services.

“The measure of a transparent government is the ease by which citizens get services from the government, especially documents that must be paid for,” he said.  

According to Recto, the “Feesbook” must contain the name of the employees and the location of offices from where the desired document will be applied for, processed and paid.

“It could be a portal for online ‘shopping’ of documents, a virtual tour of the offices where it can be secured, and with a Google map on how to get there if physical appearance is required in applying for a document,” he said.

“But if all of these can be transacted online, without compromising the authenticity of both the applicant and the permit applied for, then all the better,” Recto said.

The senator reiterated his call for a “Feesbook” as   government income from fees and charges is expected to reach P40 billion this year, up from the P36.4-billion goal this year.

He described the P40 billion as a “conservative minimum” as it only includes fees and charges considered as non-tax revenues and does not count payments for licenses classified as taxes, such as car registration fees.

The latter, officially called Motor Vehicle User’s Charge, will bring in P14.5 billion to the  national coffers next year.

Total non-tax revenue collection target for 2016 is P151.5 billion, which is P6.1 billion bigger than this year’s.

Among big non-tax revenue earners are the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA), with a collection quota of P4.6 billion for passport services; the Bureau of Immigration, P4.3 billion; Land Registration Authority (LRA), P6.3 billion; Philippine Overseas Employment Administration (POEA) P497 million; and the National Bureau of Investigation(NBI), P596 million.

Also not included in the count, Recto explained, are fees local governments charge for licenses and permits, and those collected by government corporations, like Manila International Airport Authority’s terminal fee for departing passengers. While 2016 budget documents Malacañang had sent to Congress did not indicate any increase in the cost of documents, Recto said any increase in fees and charges would only be “palatable to the public if it cuts red tape.” But whatever the rates are, “the result should be faster release of documents and less paper work,” Recto said. “An official receipt is a warranty of fast service, not just proof of payment.” The Philippines ranked a low 95th among 189 economies in overall ease of doing business according to the World Bank’s (WB) Doing Business Report for 2015.

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