Defense Lawyer in the Philippines

Defense Lawyer in the Philippines

When looking for a defense lawyer in the Philippines, there are several factors that you should consider to ensure that you choose the right lawyer for your case.

Disclaimer: This content is not legal advice and may involve AI assistance. Information may be inaccurate.

Annulment in the Philippines

In the Philippines, annulment is a legal process that declares a marriage to be null and void. An annulment may be granted for various reasons, such as lack of parental consent, fraud, mental incapacity, or impotence.

Disclaimer: This content is not legal advice and may involve AI assistance. Information may be inaccurate.

Becoming a Leading Law Firm in the Philippines

Becoming a Leading Law Firm in the Philippines

Becoming a top law firm in the Philippines takes a lot of hard work, dedication, and commitment to excellence.

Disclaimer: This content is not legal advice and may involve AI assistance. Information may be inaccurate.

Just Hire Freelancers?

Foreign companies have two options in hiring Filipinos in the Philippines to work remotely for the foreign company—start a company or hire freelancers. Such hiring practice is an industry in itself in the Philippines. This industry is called the Business Process Outsourcing industry.

Our Experience and The Industry

Our firm, Respicio & Co. Law Firm, advises a number of companies in the industry. The Philippines has a thriving business process outsourcing (BPO) industry.

Many BPOs (the hiring company) have offices in the Philippines. They take advantage, mainly, of the tax incentives provided by the government. They also find that managing employees is easier administratively and from a project management standpoint if the company has a presence in the Philippines.

BPOs that maintain a presence in the Philippines obtain a license from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) as a branch office of a foreign company or as an independent company, which can stand as a subsidiary of a foreign company. These companies also have to register with the local government authorities, tax authorities, and social security and housing agencies, among others. Many of these legal responsibilities are brought about by having employees. BPOs in the Philippines hire Filipinos as employees, as distinguished from independent contractors.

Coming with these legal responsibilities are legal compliance requirements that are paid or submitted to various government agencies. Compliance activities are performed every month. They include the payment of taxes and social contributions and the submission of reports. The cost of these requirements is expensive for BPOs maintaining many employees.

The biggest concern of local BPOs is their exposure to labor cases. To start, the Philippines has a broad list of labor standards that must be complied with, such as premium night pays and statutory bonuses. But the greater concern when it comes to cost is labor cases lodged by departed employees. Employees in the Philippines enjoy the security of tenure. They may not be terminated by will but only upon the just causes provided by the Labor Code. These causes primarily pertain to serious professional inadequacy and offenses against the company. Minor work infractions are generally forgiven by jurisprudence. Most of the issues in labor cases revolve around whether the facts causing the separation warrant it.

The largest portion of the cost of a labor case lost by the company is back wages. The employee is awarded back wages as though the employee had been entitled to his salary from the moment of separation until the finality of judgment. Illegal termination cases run on average for about two years.

There is an incentive for the companies to settle labor cases. While their case may be strong, the risk of losing in the end is expensive. Many employees pursue a labor case however unmeritorious their case may be. There is no cost on their part to lose. Local BPOs implement a complex labor management and termination process to minimize the cost of labor disputes. In practice, the rate of winning and losing a labor case is 50-50, although many labor disputes are settled out of court.

It is because of all these factors that many BPOs do not establish a presence in the Philippines (foreign BPOs). There are perhaps more foreign BPOs in existence than BPOs with a presence in the Philippines. The foreign BPO’s operation with respect to its Filipino contractors involves only entering into a service contract agreement by the contractor and the foreign BPO.

The foreign BPO’s exemption from the legal requirements above mainly stems from the Filipino contractors’ not being treated as Filipino employees. As the rendering of services, like the purchase of goods, may be carried out cross-border, what governs the relationship between the foreign BPO and the Filipino contractor is the general laws of obligations and contracts of the country where they may wish to lodge a case against the other. Whereas an employee in the Philippines and his employer are subject to the labor laws discussed above.

In practice, we have not yet seen a foreign BPO prosecuted for a labor dispute upon any of the grounds discussed above. It is perhaps because of the practical difficulty of obtaining jurisdiction over the person of the foreign BPO that is not in the Philippine jurisdiction or perhaps because the theory of employer-employee relationship between a foreign BPO and a Filipino contractor has not been recognized yet in Philippine jurisprudence. In addition to these, a lawyer may be reluctant to advocate the theory because it is plainly without merit under prevailing industry practice vis-a-vis the legal test for the existence of an employment relationship.

Under Philippine jurisprudence, an employer-employee relationship exists if the employer controls the means of the work of the employee as distinguished from the result of the work. Such control implies continual monitoring of employee execution with the power to actively order amendment of work as it is performed. Where in the beginning a definition of the result is specified and the manner of work is advised, there is no control. The company may comment on the delivered service by the contractor in the end and suggest changes thereon. There is no employment relationship in this case.

It is from these considerations that many foreign BPOs obtained confidence to hire Filipinos as contractors. This practice is prevalent and thriving.

By:

Atty. Harold Respicio, C.P.A.
Managing Partner
harold@respicio.ph
+639178588564
www.respicio.ph
Respicio & Co. Law Firm, 10th Fl., One World Place, 32nd St., Bonifacio Global City, Taguig, Philippines 1630

Disclaimer: This content is not legal advice and may involve AI assistance. Information may be inaccurate.

Tax on social media

THE BIR IS NOW A FOLLOWER: TAX ON ONLINE ENTREPRENUERS EXTENDS TO CONTENT CREATORS

Along with online businesses, “Vloggers” and Content Streamers will now be required to register with the BIR for tax purposes to aid the government in rebuilding the Philippine economy during the pandemic.
— Alfonso Dimla
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The economy of clicks and views 

As the Filipino people slowly rebuild themselves financially due to layoffs and business closures, new forms of income have been prevalent, signaling the birth of a new order in our economy. Along with medical suppliers and courier businesses, the digital economy has been immensely lucrative for YouTubers and online content creators that are now amassing unchecked revenues. 

Amid uncertainties surrounding the economic and national development during this relentless pandemic,  the BIR is now eyeing tax claims on video bloggers, online influencers, Youtubers, and other professions earning money from digital ads on their platforms. This comes from the recently passed House Bill 6765 or the Digital Economy Taxation Act of 2020 which primarily aims to tax digital services to raise more revenue for the government during these trying times. 

The bill aims to put a 12% VAT on basically all income-generating transactions online such as digital advertising, commonly found on social media platforms and various search engines, subscription-based services, which include music and video streaming i.e. Netflix and Spotify, and more commonly made nowadays, transactions made electronically or e-commerce platforms such as Shopee and Lazada. 

It also imposes upon these digital services and platforms the requirement of having an established resident agent or representative office here in the country to act as a withholding agent. All these taxes are projected to amount to about Php29 billion in revenue that the government should use to combat the pandemic and build the economy once again. 

YouTube and Netflix now eyed as a source for government funding 

As an addition to the bill, the BIR released Revenue Memorandum Circular No. 60–2020 which gave notice to all e-commerce merchants that they should be registered to the BIR, issue tax receipts, always keep track of accounting records, properly file their tax returns and pay the tax on time. 

At a recent house hearing, BIR Deputy Commissioner for Operations Arnel Guballa clarified that online bloggers commonly found on Youtube are required to register their business due to the monetization found in online ads. He also identified other online merchants and digital content creators that will also be  required to register, such as: 

1. e-Commerce platform providers 

2. Internet retailers of consumer goods 

3. Digital service, membership, and subscription 

4. Digital transaction through the use of electronic platforms and media 

5. Online blogging, filmmakers earning from advertising gained from their online channels 6. Ride-hailing services for food, transportation, delivery, or merchandise. 

In today’s social situation, more and more people look online to 

Pandemic provides good business for online entrepreneurs and artists

As the COVID-19 worldwide battle looks to go overtime up to mid-2021, more people seek solace in getting through their daily activities and responsibilities online. This includes more reliance on food delivery services, online markets that provide door-to-door delivery, and streaming websites, all of which are now generally more needed upon by the public. This in turn opens the gates for unchecked revenue that could eventually lift the economy. Famous YouTubers in the Philippines alone can earn up to Millions through a  views system found on the website, that has largely been left without tax guidance. 

Many content creators have naturally voiced out their opinion regarding the imposition as untimely and unnecessary, seeing that some innovative Filipinos have looked online to once again earn income after losing stable jobs. Even looking on the consumer side, online streaming services such as Netflix will now be required to pay VAT, which will pass down to the consumers. Such hardships ultimately fall once again on small income earners like Grab or Angkas drivers that will now have to shoulder a part of the VAT  imposed on the network orchestrators. 

The polarizing bill is still in its growing stages as more problems will arise regarding territoriality and overall logistics since the subject matter being dealt with has numerous sources that can still look to bypass any sort of impositions that may be laid upon. However, as the current health crisis seems to be far from signing off, lawmakers will need to subscribe to an efficient and encompassing policy under this new normal in our digitalized economy.

Disclaimer: This content is not legal advice and may involve AI assistance. Information may be inaccurate.