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Costa Rica's Tax Reform Saga
Enters Second Act
By Mike Godfrey, Tax-News.com
Costa Rica's legislators have
once again begun to discuss the
vexed question of reforming the
country's taxation system,
although it would appear likely
that the same problems that
blocked the former fiscal reform
bill for four years could hinder
the progress of the new
proposals.
Little detail is known of the
new bill, introduced into the
Legislative Assembly last week,
but it seems that the new tax
plan is a mixture of the old
one, which includes reforms to
the income tax system and a new
system of value-added tax, and
new proposals championed by the
recently-elected President Oscar
Arias designed to redistribute
wealth from rich to poor through
such mechanisms as a real estate
tax on luxury properties and a
0.5% financial transactions tax.
A move towards a form of
worldwide taxation system,
whereby income earned abroad but
brought into Costa Rica, is also
included in the bill. Currently,
Costa Rica taxes only income
derived from within its borders.
Originally, the Permanent Fiscal
Reform Package, introduced under
the government of former
president Abel Pacheco in 2002,
sought to raise an additional
us$500 million in tax revenue to
help the government close its
fiscal deficit and meet its debt
obligations. The package, seen
by many as an investment-killing
bill, had many opponents in the
assembly, and various delaying
tactics were used to slow its
progress.
The bill itself was eventually
killed off shortly before the
presidential elections earlier
this year when the Sala IV
(Constitutional Court) ruled
that supporters acted illegally
in the Legislative Assembly by
creating new procedures to "fast
track" priority legislation,
including the tax bill.
However, Arias, rather than
introducing a simplified version
of the bill, as was expected
after he was elected in
February, has given lawmakers a
nine-part monster to mull over,
meaning that the legislative
process is likely to be
similarly protracted as under
Pacheco. Arias's new proposals
are also only likely to entrench
opposition from pro-business
lawmakers.
Moreover, with the Legislative
Assembly facing a packed
schedule - lawmakers are also
attempting to repair a botched
Immigration Bill, while the all
important CAFTA free trade deal
remains to be dealt with - the
tax reform saga is likely to be
prolonged for some time to come.
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