Manila Standard

Legislator hails closure of large e-cigarette firm

-

ALBAY Rep. Joey Sarte Salceda has lauded a decision by the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) to suspend the operations of the electronic cigarette distributo­r FLAVA.

Salceda, chairman of the House Committee on Ways and Means, welcomed FLAVA’s closure following a series of raids resulting in the seizure of billions of pesos worth of smuggled vapes

“I am very pleased with the DTI’s move to shut FLAVA down. We are already looking at a minimum of P9.3 billion in smuggled goods and evaded taxes by this company. And looking at the proliferat­ion of its goods in local markets, there is more to be uncovered,” Salceda said.

“So, I strongly urge the Bureau of Customs to keep on doing raids. There is probably more in warehouses,” Salceda added.

Salceda stressed that as a result of the proliferat­ion of electronic cigarettes that do not pay the co responding excise taxes and duties, government collection­s from tobacco excise taxes went down from a peak of P176 billion in 2021 to just P142 billion in 2023.

“And the decline will continue as more people shift from the taxed cigarettes to the untaxed. Make no mistake, that’s a threat to everyone, because Universal Health Care derives funding from tobacco excise taxes,” he said.

“Policy-wise, I want to eliminate the distinctio­ns between freebase and nicotine salt, because the differenti­al in rates has also been abused. For a 10mL pod, the tax on free base is P60, but P520 for salt nic. FLAVA has been labeling its goods as freebase, when independen­t testing finds it appears to be nicotine salt.”

“We also want to the de minimis value of P10,000 absolutely not applicable on excisable goods,” Salceda added. Maricel V. Cruz

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines