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IVA to rise to 25% if Brussels’ insists on further Portuguese austerity

IVA to rise to 25% if Brussels’ insists on further Portuguese austerityFollowing his impassioned speech on Tuesday declaring Portugal will “not accept to be condemned to live in poverty, a country of low salaries”, prime minister António Costa has let it be revealed that if push comes to shove, the PS government will increase IVA by two percentage points, from the current 23% to 25%.

This way, the “billion euro” haircut being demanded by Brussels will bypass the need to touch salaries or pensions, explains national tabloid Correio da Manhã.

Each percentage point increase will bring state coffers 660 million “with immediate effect” - leaving the left wing alliance that is keeping the government afloat intact.

But how such an increase would be seen by business leaders is another matter entirely.

For now, explains CM, the prime minister is sticking to his guns.

Costa does not believe the Plan B under demand from Brussels is needed anyway, and he will be using the fact that Spain has just been given ‘time’ to adjust its excessive deficit as yet another reason for European moneymen to cut Portugal some slack.

European Commissioner for Economic and Foreign Affairs Pierre Moscovici announced yesterday that Spain would be given a further year to adjust its deficit - which came in last year at a whopping 5.1%.

With Portugal’s 'excessive' deficit at 3.1% (not including Banif), this week hinges strategies.

Tomorrow, Thursday, will see the Council of Ministers convene to approve the country's Stability Programme and National Programme of Reforms - both of will then pass to Brussels, for final ratification, at the end of the month.

Article by kind permission of http://portugalresident.com

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Comments  

+4 #6 Charly 2016-04-21 18:48
Dear Mr Steve O: allow me toll you that - on the explicit condition your property is 100% fully legal - I or any accountant or even lawyer can provide you an AL license in about 2 hours for a cost of less than 50 €. It's as simple as that exception madeof course when the premisses had some illegal alterations or when the electrical or the hygiëne conditions are very bad. Checking FACTS is always necessary and from time to another one can have .... good surprises....
-2 #5 Steve.O 2016-04-21 16:10
Entirely missing from any Portuguese analysis of the country's failings that led it into this mess is the IKEA Syndrome of restricting new players (aka competition) at all levels of play and in all sectors. Had they been here they would have shaken up the standards of business practice - if nothing else. Generated new money and employment. Mirroring countries like the UK which has hoovered up so many thousands of Portuguese. Now UK tax payers.

Remind ourselves of that oft referred to idiocy - the Tourism Sector. Even now opening a B&B, 'simple' as it would be in a developed country; is a route to madness, an impossibility, for so many EU foreigners here.

Showing yet again that Portugal is still not capable, after all these years, of functioning as a suitable European Union member state. It brought these problems on itself and should take its medicine. From Doctor IMF.
+3 #4 Charly 2016-04-21 15:03
This is about the most politico-criminal statement I ever heard: why must "the poor Portugese" (read: everybody) be taxed with 2% more ??????? This is the super good occasion to IMPOSE the RICH (let's say the 10.000 riches in this country) how compassionate they should be and let them pay their contribution in order to bail out the country for once and for all. That should be a very strong sign of solidarity and responsability... and of course a totally new way to see and to make politics in this over-corrupt country.
+3 #3 liveaboard 2016-04-21 10:28
With the austerity regime clearly decimating the economy, driving out the educated youth, and destroying any possibility of paying back previous loans, the obvious solution to the problem is; more "austerity".
Once the last euro has been wrested from the broke population and shifted into foreign banks [some legitimate, some not], Brussels can say they did all they could, but Portugal just won't do as they're told by people who know better.
+3 #2 dw 2016-04-20 20:29
Quoting Maximillian:
If everyone would just pay IVA for their goods and services, rather than avoiding it, this country wouldn't be in such a mess.
Increasing IVA will only further stimulate the black market.


If everyone paid the full IVA the economy would have shrunk even more than it already has and the situation would likely be even worse. What might help would be the rich elites paying their taxes instead of hiding their trillions offshore and jacking up taxes for the small people.
+7 #1 Maximillian 2016-04-20 18:21
If everyone would just pay IVA for their goods and services, rather than avoiding it, this country wouldn't be in such a mess.
Increasing IVA will only further stimulate the black market.

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