Showing posts with label Property tax. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Property tax. Show all posts

Saturday, July 14

Property tax to stay


IN a move to increase their income, the Greek government are to continue with the very unpopular property tax,a move that will certainly increase pressure on the whole country.
  The government has decided that the special property tax introduced in 2011 will be tagged on to electricity bills again this year after all, according to Public Power Corporation (PPC) officials.
  After repeated meetings and the realization that the Finance Ministry will be unable to collect the sum of 2.2 billion euros corresponding to the emergency tax, the government resorted to the more secure but painful solution of collecting the tax through PPC, despite earlier indications that this would not be the case this year.
  Up until yesterday the Finance Ministry had said that it was looking for the best way to collect the so-called special extraordinary tax for all properties connected to the power grid, though officials at the power company suggested that the decision had already been made.
  In fact, PPC said that it had been asked to include the tax in all bills issued as of July 23, but the company countered that it did not have the time to issue bills with the tax before the end of the month. Unlike last year, when the tax was paid in two installments, this year’s tax will be paid in five installments, with the last two to due in 2013.
  Everybody is being hit, and that includes us of course, but some will be hard pressed to pay up again. With jobs still at a premium, people are really being hurt by the austerity measures. Their argument is simple, if we have no work how do we not only pay the bills, but how do we feed are families?




 

Friday, December 16

Bring us your money - or we shall collect it anyway!

THERE has been a new call for Greece to fight the economic situation as one, although we are not too sure how the general public will see the call by the Government.  Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos is urging Greeks with overseas bank deposits to bring their money back to Greece.
 "I have called for a patriotic campaign for bank deposits to be repatriated. The Greek banking system is totally guaranteed under the agreements we have made," Venizelos told parliament.
 Deposit withdrawals in Greece since the crisis started in late 2009 have added pressure on banks, already strained weaker mortgage payments and plans to write-off debt in an international bond-swap deal.
Venizelos defended continued austerity measures, set to extend the recession into a fourth year in 2012. "We are doing what is absolutely necessary, because otherwise we will be excluded from borrowing and the eurozone," he said, standing in for Lucas Papademos for the weekly Prime Minister's questions session. source Athens News
Nikos Lekkas' team of tax investigators knew they were on to something when they found that a humble farmer on the island of Thasos owned a red Ferrari and a Porsche.
  Intrigued by how a farmer who had declared just 100,000 euros in income over the past decade could afford such luxuries, Lekkas dispatched an undercover tax agent to the northern Aegean island.
 The agent was back soon, not only was the Thasos "farmer" earning far more than he had disclosed to the state, he was in an entirely different line of business: loan sharking.
 Greece is now close to a deal to seize 10m euros from the man, says Lekkas, the no. 2 official in the newly relaunched Financial and Economic Crime unit (SDOE). He proudly points to the case as one of many signs that the country is finally serious about hunting down tax cheats and making them pay up.
 "Earlier there was no political will by governments to get to the bottom of this", Lekkas, a tax veteran at 59, said in his office near Piraeus.  "Now that we've reached the edge of the cliff, they've decided to implement measures against tax evasion."

The government looks set to exceed its revenue targets from the unpopular property tax, an official at the Public Power Corporation (DEI) which is collecting the tax said on Thursday
 A total of 650m euros of the tax have been collected so far, suggesting the final take may breach the government's initial goals, said the official who declined to be named "This [figure] means that the government will meet its 1.7bn euro revenue target for this year, probably hitting 2bn," he said.
 DEI is collecting the tax through electricity bills under the threat of cutting consumers' power if they fail to comply. But despite the protests, only about a fifth of households are in arrears – the usual rate for all DEI bills, the official said.
The government imposed the tax in September in a desperate move to meet its budget deficit targets under the EU/IMF bailout.