Tag: higher

  • The new fiscal law package at a first reading

    The new fiscal law package at a first reading

    The PSD-PNL government coalition in Bucharest on
    Wednesday night held its first talks over the new series of measures aimed at
    attaining a long-term balanced state budget and easing the EU-fund absorption. The
    country’s Finance Minister, Marcel Boloş, recalls that Romania has pledged to clear
    the 4.4% budget deficit target. And if it fails to achieve that, it runs the
    risk of seeing major EU fund cuts from the European Commission, funds, which
    are crucial in the process of streamlining the country’s infrastructure,
    including motorways, hospitals and schools.




    Marcel Boloş: We have 46
    billion euros in the cohesion policy and another 29.3 in the National Plan of
    Recovery and Resilience. So we are talking Romania’s future here, 75 billion euros,
    which we cannot afford being suspended.




    Besides cutting on public expenses, the Executive also
    wants to fight tax evasion, to improve income taxation and cut fiscal
    privileges. In an attempt to reduce the anxiety caused by the upcoming higher taxes
    and prices, the same Finance Minister says that prices will indeed be raised while
    banks and small enterprises will be paying higher taxes, but the VAT will rise only
    for some categories of goods and services




    Marcel Boloş: Food
    stuff will stay around 9%, and so will medicine, but medical prostheses for
    disabled people will remain at 0% VAT. At the same time we are going to have 5%
    for firewood, thermal energy, gas, everything that means household consumption.




    Before the government session, the new
    fiscal-budgetary measures had been tackled by the Three-party Social Dialogue
    Council, a body made up of representatives of the government, employers’
    associations and trade unions.




    According to their president Florin Jianu, The
    Employers’ Associations seem to be contented with the decision as they got the
    promise the measures will be applied as of January 1st 2024 and the
    VAT in the hospitality industry will remain unchanged.




    Florin Jianu: The
    hospitality industry will have a 9% VAT, a very good thing for this sector. Had
    the VAT been raised in this sector we would have completely lost
    competitiveness against our Bulgarian neighbors.




    Trade unions, however, are dissatisfied with the
    decision that holiday vouchers be given only to state employees with salaries
    up to 16 hundred euros. In response Social-Democratic Prime Minister Marcel
    Ciolacu said:




    Marcel Ciolacu With a state salary of 8.000 lei, one cannot apply for
    holiday vouchers, neither for food allowances. Employees with low salaries will
    continue to get vouchers, even at a higher value, but it’s totally unfair to
    give them to the employees with high salaries.




    Prime Minister Ciolacu is to present next week in
    Parliament the aforementioned package of fiscal-budgetary measures for which
    its Executive will assume responsibility.


    The new measures, which have attracted a lot of heat
    from the opposition, have been described by the country’s president, Klaus
    Iohannis, as a step in the right direction.




    (bill)