Study slams tax system

Published: 10 November 2004 y., Wednesday
Hungary’s tax system is threatening its attractiveness for foreign investment amongst its neighbors, and is hurting the competitiveness of local companies, according to the findings of a recent tax survey compiled for the BBJ by international advisory powerhouse KPMG. In the survey, KPMG compared the tax systems of Bulgaria, Croatia, Romania, and Turkey and the ten countries that joined the EU in May – including Hungary. “The local business tax, the high VAT rate and the employer’s contribution burdens related to social security are the biggest threats to Hungary’s competitiveness,” said Tamбs Mlinбrik, tax manager at KPMG’s Budapest office. Mlinбrik coordinated the cross-country survey. “Cutting the corporate tax level is on the agenda in most countries of the Central and East European region. In some countries they went down from the beginning of this year,” he said. “Hungary is gradually losing its competitive edge in this field, while several negative attributes of its tax system are getting more visible.” According to the report, corporate tax rates are under 30% in all the surveyed countries except for Malta and Turkey. The lowest rates are in the Baltic states, Cyprus (10%) and Hungary (16%). The highest rates are in place in Malta (35%), Turkey (33%) and Slovenia. Cyprus, in fact, makes state enterprises pay a corporate tax 10 percentage points higher than private ones, a unique example of enterprise-friendly taxing, the report found. According to Mlinбrik, Hungary is the only one of the surveyed countries that maintains a revenue-based local business tax. A local business tax that resembles the Hungarian regime is in place in Lithuania, but its rate – between 0.3% and 0.48% – is a fraction of the Hungarian one.
Šaltinis: bbj.hu
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

Netscape 6.1 PR1 Released

Netscape has released Netscape 6.1_PR1, a beta of the next release of its Mozilla-based browser, for the Windows (English, Japanese, or German), Macintosh, and Linux operating systems. more »

A five-year non-disclosure agreement

Alleged E-Commerce Extortionist To Plead Not Guilty more »

Kaliningrad Region Forms Transport Coordination Council

The Council intends to develop a cooperation agreement between all transportation market participants operating in the region. more »

High consumer price index

ESTONIA'S CONSUMER PRICE INDEX INCREASES 0.7 PERCENT IN MAY more »

World Bank delegation arrives in Ukraine

A World Bank delegation arrived in Ukraine's capital Kyiv on Thursday for a weeklong visit to meet the country's new Cabinet and discuss further cooperation. more »

Japan Dial-Up Subscribers Top 17M In March

Japan has seen its dial-up Internet market jump by 63 percent in a 15-month period, according to Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications figures. more »

54 Net companies fold in May

The Internet sector kept hemorrhaging in May as 54 companies shut down, bringing the total of dot-coms turned dot-bombs to at least 493 since January 2000 more »

Mercedes vs. BMW

The world's luxury-car leaders are debating how big a company has to get to afford the new technologies their customers demand more »

Military Indifferent About Maskhadov’s Whereabouts

Despite all the Kremlin’s claims to the contrary, the ex-President of Chechnya and rebel leader Aslan Maskhadov is not hiding in the most inaccessible areas of the mountainous Nozhai-Yurtovsky district of Chechnya. more »

Iraq to Stop Exporting Crude Oil Monday

Iraqi oil exports that are part of the oil-for-food program are coming to a halt this Monday in retaliation for a U.N. decision involving sanctions against Iraq, industry leaders said Saturday. more »