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ECONOMY | 19-11-2020 02:05

Chamber of Deputies approves government’s ‘wealth tax’ bill

Lawmakers in Argentina’s lower house approve move to introduce one-off levy affecting those with largest fortunes. Bill, which Peronist lawmakers hope will raise US$3 billion, now goes to Senate.

Lawmakers in Argentina’s lower house on Wednesday approved a bill that will see the nation’s wealthy citizens slapped with a one-off capital levy on assets.

After lengthy debate, the initiative passed a vote, gaining 133 votes in favour, with 115 against and two abstentions. The Chamber of Deputies began discussing the bill on Tuesday afternoon and debate continued until a vote in the early hours of Wednesday morning. It now heads to the Senate for debate, which will likely consider it before the end of the month. 

The so-called "wealth tax," backed by President Alberto Fernández’s government, will see individuals with more than US$2.3 million in assets make an “Extraordinary Solidarity Contribution.” State coffers running low amid the coronavirus pandemic and officials are hoping the tax could rake in upwards of US$3 billion. 

The one-time “extraordinary contribution” was rejected by the opposition Juntos por el Cambio coalition, which branded it "confiscatory." 

Echoing the voices of some business chambers, party lawmakers said it would undermine private investment, despite the bill affecting individuals and not companies. 

"This is a lousy tax because it is going to ward off any hint of investment in Argentina," said opposition lawmaker Javier Campos.

In the end, the ruling coalition had the numbers it needed to render the point moot. The two absentions were from left-wing lawmakers who presented their own bill.

According to estimates, the levy will affect between 9,000 and 12,000 of Argentina’s richest citizens. The one-time contribution will affect individuals whose declared assets exceed 200 million pesos and runs at a progressive rate of up to 3.5 percent for assets in Argentina and up to 5.25 percent on assets and goods outside the country.

"We do not have a problem with the private sector, we need the private sector, together with the public sector, investing together. What discourages investment are bad governments," argued Deputy Máximo Kirchner, one of the bill’s promoters and the leader of the Frente de Todos bloc.

The bill says the “extraordinary contribution” is a one-time measure. It establishes that 20 percent of what is raised from the levy will be used for medical supplies to attend to the Covid-19 health emergency, with another 20 percent for programmes to help small and medium-sized businesses (SMEs, PyMES), 15 percent for social development programmes, 20 percent for student scholarships and 25 percent for development programmes related to natural gas. 

The law provides for higher rates for assets located abroad, but offers relief for those who decide to repatriate them in whole or in part.

Peronist lawmaker Carlos Heller, who co-authored the bill, said that the levy would affect “10,000 people, 0.8 percent of total taxpayers. Forty-two percent have dollarised assets, of which 92 percent are located abroad. It is clear that this contribution is far from a tax on productive activity,” he said, railing against what he called “lies” slandering the bill.

As lawmakers debated inside the lower house, thousands of pro-government supporters rallied outside Congress to show their backing for the initiative. Others staged vehicle caravans and tooted car horns to call for the bill’s approval.

 

– TIMES/AFP

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