BAD COPS MEANS BIG MONEY.
Published:
16 February 2000 y., Wednesday
Estonia_s Tax Board warned the efficiency of the economic police in prosecuting tax frauds may lead to an unexpected gap in the budget as the state must pay sales tax refunds and interest to crooked businessmen, the daily Eeesti Paevaleht reported. Tax fraud cases committed in the middle of the 1990s are nearing their statute of limitations and the state will have to make the payment in the absence of convictions. Enriko Aav, Tax Board supervisory department head, said the sum involved may reach hundreds of millions of kroons. An advisor to the Finance Ministry disagreed, saying there is a proposal to increase the statute of limitation from five to seven years. The Tax Board has opened 600 cases in the last five years, but only several dozen have reached the courts.
Šaltinis:
The Baltic Times
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
EBRD to pay 4.6 billion roubles for 11.75 percent stake.
more »
On 24 November in London a letter of intent will be signed between Alytus Municipality and the Spanish aluminium company “Sopena group” regarding investments of the “Sopena group” in Alytus.
more »
Tourism opportunities in Dzūkija Region of Lithuania and other issues of incoming tourism promotion were the main topics of the meeting of the Mixed Intergovernmental Commission on Trade and Economic Cooperation between the People’s Republic of China and the Republic of Lithuania.
more »
On 22-23 November in Kiyv, foreign ministers of Lithuania, Ukraine and Belarus discuss trilateral cooperation and participation of Belarus and Ukraine in the Eastern Partnership of the European Union.
more »
The Kozloduy International Decommissioning Support Fund is supporting an innovative programme to boost energy savings and efficiency of public buildings in Bulgaria with a €5 million grant.
more »
Bank DnB NORD’s Economic Research Group predicts that out of the six Baltic Rim countries, moderate economic growth will be seen in Poland, Finland and, possibly Estonia in 2010, while Denmark, Lithuania and Latvia will need more time to climb out of recession.
more »
In a meeting in Brussels of the European Bank Coordination Initiative held on 19 November 2009, the parent banks of the six largest foreign banks active in Hungary reaffirmed their commitments made in May 2009 to support their subsidiaries.
more »
On 17 November 2009, the Board of AB Bank SNORAS decided to establish the bank’s representative office in London.
more »
The European Commission has approved, under EC Treaty state aid rules, two capital injections in favour of 'The Mortgage and Land Bank of Latvia' (LHZB).
more »
The government of G hana will tomorrow sign an historic agreement with the EU aimed at ensuring that only legally harvested timber from the West African country is exported to the EU market.
more »