Malaysia’s Petronas Secures Hormuz Transit For Crude Tanker Through Iranian Diplomatic Channel

Malaysia’s nearly one million barrel-per-day refining capacity gives it a downstream buffer most ASEAN neighbors lack during the Hormuz crisis.

Indonesia’s B50 Biodiesel Program And The Deforestation Risk Hiding In The Energy Independence Agenda

Indonesia’s biodiesel program saved an estimated USD 40.7 billion in foreign exchange between 2020 and 2025. B50 is projected to add USD 10.84 billion in 2026 alone.

Malaysia Science Minister Reaffirms Nuclear Energy Assessment Amid Rising Demand And Hormuz Supply Shock

Malaysia’s amended Atomic Energy Licensing Act, in force since December 2025, extended licensing requirements across the full nuclear value chain.

Saudi Aramco’s April Supply Cut Leaves Asian Refiners Scrambling For Alternative Crude

Saudi Arabia’s April crude supply to Asia is down 38.6% from February levels. Refineries across Southeast Asia are now competing for a narrower pool of Arab Light from a single Red Sea port.
SEND TO: pressreleases@pageonemedia.ph

VAT Removal On 21 Medicines To Benefit More Pinoys

VAT exemption of 21 medicines for cancer, diabetes, hypertension, kidney disease, mental illness, and tuberculosis aims to make essential medicines more affordable for Filipinos.


VAT Removal On 21 Medicines To Benefit More Pinoys

33
33

How do you feel about this story?

Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

More Filipinos may now benefit from more affordable medicines following the value-added tax (VAT) exemption of 21 medicines for cancer, diabetes, hypertension, kidney disease, mental illness, and tuberculosis.

On Tuesday, Bureau of Internal Revenue’s (BIR) Commissioner Romeo Lumagui Jr. announced that the specified drugs are now exempted from VAT.

Lumagui noted that the VAT exemption is under Revenue Memorandum Circular No. 17-2024.

“I welcomed that because these are the drugs that are needed by people who are really sick, so VAT exemption is very important in lowering the price of the medicine,” Department of Health (DOH) Secretary Teodoro Herbosa said in a media forum on Wednesday.

“Mas marami akong mabibigyan with the budget that legislation gives me so kung mura ang medicines because of removal of the VAT, malaking tulong yun (If medicines cheaper because of the removal of the VAT, that’s a big help. I can give [medicines] to more people with the budget that legislation gives me),” he added.

About PHP 1.7 billion was allocated for the DOH from the national budget this year.

Herbosa said cases and deaths due to cancer and tuberculosis happen when patients have limited access to medicines that help control these diseases.

The same goes for non-communicable diseases like diabetes and hypertension, he said.

“Kasi ‘yung mga mahihirap ay humihinto ng pag-inom kasi nga ang mahal ng gamot (The marginalized stop taking medicines because they are expensive). So, we want to make that medicine available also to our poorest of the Filipinos,” he added.

In 2023, the BIR exempted a total of 59 medicines from VAT to ease the financial burden of Filipinos taking medications to improve their health conditions and quality of life. These included “maintenance” drugs for diabetes, high cholesterol, and hypertension. (PNA)