A new agreement

Published: 30 September 2001 y., Sunday
Estonian and Latvian officials have initialed a new agreement on double taxation that will come into force on Jan. 1. Finance ministry officials from Estonia and Latvia held a meeting in Rīga from Monday to Thursday to discuss Latvia's plans to impose an income tax on Estonian firms active in Latvia, although corporate income tax on investments has been abolished in Estonia. The agreement initialed in Rīga is in line with most Estonian tax agreements. Andrejs Birums, director of the Latvian Finance Ministry's Tax Convention Department,informed that the convention's amended draft would give each country broader rights to set taxes for the other nation's companies operating in their territories. Both countries will use the simple credit method to remove the double taxation problem, said the Estonian Finance Ministry. The right to tax dividends, interests and royalties will be divided between the source country and the resident country. Latvia has also announced plans to reduce corporate income tax to 15 percent from the current 25 percent by the year 2004.
Šaltinis:
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Investing in Poland pays well, says Merril Lynch report

According to a report published yesterday by Merril Lynch, no other member country has gained more than Poland from EU accession more »

Russia negotiates early repayment of Paris Club debt

Russia is negotiating the early repayment of its Paris Club debt, President Vladimir Putin said yesterday more »

Investors circle over Eurobank

According to reports, the owner of Eurobank is ready to sell the company for $150-180 million more »

KAZAKH PRESIDENT DECRIES BLOATED COMPANIES

At a cabinet meeting on 1 February, Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbaev criticized state-owned companies, banks and large holding companies for holding too many noncore assets more »

Lisbon re-booted

Commission rallies EU governments to collective economic cause more »

Lhe Lowest tax-to-GDP Ratio

Lithuania offers the lowest tax-to-GDP ratio in the EU more »

Romanian credit outlook raised by S&P

International ratings agency Standard and Poor's has raised Romania's credit outlook to positive from stable, the Rompres news agency reported Tuesday more »

Member States need to embrace reform decisively

Member States need to embrace reform more decisively to create more growth and jobs, EU Commission reports show more »

Poland budget reform plans

Jan Rokita, tipped to become Poland’s prime minister after 2005 elections, wants swift public finance reforms including a weaker role for the finance minister in creating annual budgets more »

A Preliminary Report

Latvia’s Parex banka posts 12 pct profit growth to EUR 21.3 mln for 2004 more »