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Costa
Rican Lawmakers May Vote On Tax
Reform Plan,
by Mike Godfrey,
Tax-News.com
Supporters of Costa Rica's
long-awaited fiscal reform
package are attempting to
schedule a vote in the
legislative assembly for the
latter half of this week, and
reports indicate that a new
intake of pro-tax reform
lawmakers after the recent
tightly-fought election could
eventually swing the balance on
the controversial issue.
First put forward in 2002, the
tax package has been a divisive
piece of legislation and its
opponents have used a number of
delaying procedures to ensure
that it remains bogged down in
the legislative assembly,
despite attempts to fast-track
the legislation.
The tax plan will introduce some
major changes if passed, such as
a switch to worldwide taxation
from the current territorial tax
system, meaning that tax will
have to be paid on worldwide
income by those resident in
Costa Rica.
However, foreign individuals
living in Costa Rica who can
prove that their income has
already been taxed in another
jurisdiction, or are able to
show that income is to be
invested in the country, would
be exempt under recent
amendments.
In a bid to make the corporate
taxation system more transparent
and efficient, the bill proposes
a general tax rate of 30% on all
types of economic activity, a
departure from the current
system whereby companies declare
and pay tax separately on each
activity. This tax rate may fall
to 25% within five years if
revenues exceed economic growth.
Another important change would
be the introduction of value
added tax, or IVA, which will
replace the 13% sales tax and
expand coverage to all but a
handful of exempt services, such
as water and electricity up to
certain usage limits.
Generally, it is thought that
the tax reforms will increase
the amount of tax paid by those
earning more than us$3,000 per
month, and reduce the tax burden
on those earning less than this
amount.
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