Never pass up a chance to sit down or relieve yourself. -old Apache saying

Thursday, August 25, 2011

New French tax

Just last week, you might have heard that several of France's wealthiest people told the French government that they were willing to pay higher taxes to help the country reduce its debt.  Well, yesterday, the French government decided to do just that, increasing the tax rate on the wealthiest by an extra 3%.

Now look at our pitiful country.  With a Democratic Congress, they couldn't (or didn't) even rescind the Bush tax cuts.  This country is becoming hopelessly stupid and greedy.  (Becoming?)

France introduces new tax on high incomes

The French government is to impose an extra tax of 3% on annual income above 500,000 euros (£440,000; $721,000).

It is part of a package of measures to try to cut the country's deficit by 12bn euros over two years.

The tax increase came after some of France's wealthiest people had called on the government to tackle its deficit by raising taxes on the rich.

Paris has also reduced its economic growth forecast for 2012 to 1.75% from a previous 2.25%.

'Rigorous'

And it has cut its 2011 growth forecast from 2% to 1.75%, Prime Minister Francois Fillon has said.

He said the new tax would remain in place until France reduces its budget deficit back under the EU's intended limit of 3% of GDP, which should occur in 2013.

France plans to trim its public deficit to 5.7 % this year, 4.6 % next year and 3% in 2013.

"This is a rigorous policy that will allow France to remain relaxed," Mr Fillon said. "Our country must stick to its [deficit] commitments. It's in the interest of all French people."

Faced with flat growth, the persistent threat to the country's precious AAA rating, and all sorts of turmoil on the nervous financial markets, President Sarkozy is wielding the axe.

In total he's proposing 12bn euros of savings over the next two years.

Higher taxes for big companies, a cap on tax deductions applying to overtime - and a new "special contribution" from the wealthiest in the country.

It's a U-turn - in so many ways - designed to reassure investors and voters alike that only he can be trusted with the French economy.

Sixteen executives, including Europe's richest woman, the L'Oreal heiress Liliane Bettencourt, had offered in an open letter to pay a "special contribution" in a spirit of "solidarity".

It appeared on the website of the French magazine Le Nouvel Observateur.

It was signed by some of France's most high-profile chief executives, including Christophe de Margerie of oil firm Total, Frederic Oudea of bank Societe Generale, and Air France's Jean-Cyril Spinetta.

They said: "We, the presidents and leaders of industry, businessmen and women, bankers and wealthy citizens would like the richest people to have to pay a 'special contribution'."

They said they had benefited from the French system and that: "When the public finances deficit and the prospects of a worsening state debt threaten the future of France and Europe and when the government is asking everybody for solidarity, it seems necessary for us to contribute."

They warned, however, that the contribution should not be so severe that it would provoke an exodus of the rich or increased tax avoidance.

Original.

Note:  I had to remove the post titled, "Liberals are smarter" because it's just embarrassing, especially when one looks at the U.S. Congress.  Liberals may indeed be smarter, but they have a severe testicular deficit.  If they were truly smarter, they would have figured out a way around the Republicans stubborn intransigence.  Oh wait, could be that there are actually no liberals IN Congress.  Certainly not in the White House.  Which could explain a lot.

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