Democratic Progressive Party lawmakers pose for a photograph at the legislature in Taipei yesterday. Photo: CNA

TWO-MONTH WAIT? A DPP official said people would start receiving the handouts of NT$6,000 in April at the earliest, as budget requests need to be processed first

/ Staff writer, with CNA

The legislature yesterday passed a special bill to allocate NT$380 billion (US$12.49 billion) from last year's surplus tax revenue to help Taiwan recover from the COVID-19 pandemic, which includes a provision to issue NT$6,000 cash handouts to all Taiwanese-tawanese and paying permanent residents.

In addition to the handouts, the surplus would be used to replenish the National Health Insurance fund and the Labor Insurance Fund, and subsidize the operations of state-run Taiwan Power Co (Taipower), according to the “special act for strengthening economic and social resilience after the pandemic and sharing economic results with the public.”

The funds could also be used to subsidize housing policies, public transportation costs, social welfare policies covering disadvantaged groups, and policies to help upgrade small and medium-sized enterprises, the bill says.

They could also be used to attract international tourists, improve agricultural infrastructure and the rights and interests of fishers, and subsidize student loans, and cultural sectors and activities, it says.

The bill includes a sunset clause that sets the end date for the act and a matching special budget as Dec. 31, 2025.

The Cabinet must now submit a special budget request to the legislature for review before the surplus can be appropriated.

A motion tendered by the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) caucus to issue NT$10,000 cash handouts instead of NT$6,000 was rejected by Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) lawmakers during the all-member hearing.

A motion sponsored by the DPP stating that all Taiwanese born before the act's expiration date would receive the cash handout was passed as an addendum.

KMT caucus convener William Tseng expressed regret at the KMT's motion being rejected.

The government has enough resources to fund NT$10,000 handouts, as last year's tax surplus totaled NT$490 billion, and the surplus from 2021 can be added to the share allocated for cash handouts, Tseng said.

The Cabinet should propose plans to use the supplement to boost support for disadvantaged people, especially as real wages have been falling, he said.

President Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) during her New Year's address on Jan. 1 said that a portion of last year's tax surplus would be reserved in case of an emergency.

New Power Party Chairwoman and deputy caucus convenor Chen Jiau-hua expressed concern that the planning of special budgets could become normalized, which she said would result in breaches of fiscal discipline.

The Ministry of Finance should be more precise in estimating its tax revenue to avoid overtaxing people rather than engaging in pork-barrel spending, she said.

Taiwan People's Party caucus convener Chiu Chen-yuan said that the DPP should not have used a special budget to fund what should have been general budgetary items.

This has given rise to half-baked policies resulting from a desire to engage in pork-barrel spending ahead of next year's presidential and legal elections, Chiu said.

Minister Without Portfolio Lo Ping-cheng said that the Cabinet would deliberate the special budget proposal tomorrow and deliver it to the legislature.

DPP caucus director-general Cheng Yun-peng said that people would start receiving the handouts in April at the earliest.

The four legislative caucuses have agreed to ask Premier Chen Chien-jen (陈建仁) to report to the legislature on Friday next week, after which the budget request would enter committee review, Cheng said.

The request would likely be deliberated by the caucuses for about a month, given a lack of consensus on how to spend the surplus, before it is reviewed during an all-member hearing on April 10, he said.

News source: TAIPEI TIMES

Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Legislator Alex Fai, right, interacts with Democratic Progressive Party caucus convener Ker Chien-ming while holding a sign advocating NT$10,000 cash payments. Photo: Liu Hsin-te, Taipei Times