Annual tax 'safari' starts in Greece to meet bailout-mandated budget surplus

Greece’s independent public assets authority – itself a memorandum-mandated institution to succeed the previous and often politicized tax bureau – must ramp up collection of this year’s due taxes as well as arrears inherited from previous years, naftemporiki.gr reports.

Greece must achieve a primary budget surplus of 3.5 percent of GDP in 2019, as per revised fiscal targets emanating from the third bailout signed by the Tsipras government in 2015.

Almost 40% of the country’s residents (4.1 million taxpayers) currently owe a whopping 104 billion euros in arrears to the Greek state, with the Commission’s target being 5.5 billion euros of the arrears to be cleared by the tax bureau.

A large chunk of the 104 billion euros however dates back decades, owed by companies no longer in existence, bankrupt entities and taxpayers no longer economically active or even alive.

Conversely, some 64.5% of the 4.1 million taxpayers with even one euro in arrears to the state face confiscation measures, mostly deductions from bank deposits they have and withheld income from monthly salaries.

RELATED TOPICS: GreeceGreek tourism newsTourism in GreeceGreek islandsHotels in GreeceTravel to GreeceGreek destinations Greek travel marketGreek tourism statisticsGreek tourism report

 

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