Arab Times

Jordan pushes new tax bill to parliament

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AMMAN, Sept 26, (RTRS): Jordan’s cabinet sent to parliament an IMFbacked draft tax bill, a main plank of austerity measures to ease rising public debt, an issue that caused street protests last summer, officials said.

The government hopes to push through the new legislatio­n within two months despite opposition from many deputies, saying the law promotes social justice by targeting high earners and combats long-time corporate tax evaders.

Prime Minister Omar al-Razzaz, a former World Bank economist, was appointed by the monarch last June after his predecesso­r was sacked in a move to defuse a crisis that saw some of the largest protests in years over tax hikes.

Razzaz withdrew from Parliament a tax law that had been put forward by the previous government and said he would hold “broad consultati­ons with civic bodies over a new tax system that will not trample on citizens’ rights.”

Earlier this year, a general sales tax was raised and a subsidy on bread was scrapped as part of the IMF’s threeyear fiscal plan that aims to cut the spiralling $37 billion debt, equivalent to 95 percent of gross domestic product.

Unions and civic associatio­ns behind last June’s protests have rejected the new modified tax bill saying it should not have been drafted but have so far stopped short of calling for street protests. They want the government to give priority to fighting corruption and cutting public waste.

The government says the new law softens the impact of the tax hikes on middle class families by raising personal income thresholds and reintroduc­ing personal exemptions.

Razzaz has promised to restore public trust in a country where many blame successive government­s for failing to deliver on pledges of reviving growth and curbing corruption.

Razzaz has warned that parliament’s rejection of the bill would risk hurting the debt-laden economy, where annual growth has been stagnant at around 2 percent in recent years.

Any delay would push even higher the cost of servicing over 1 billion dinars ($1.4 billion) of foreign debt due in 2019, raising the prospect of rating agencies downgradin­g the kingdom’s credit ratings, Razzaz said in a recent interview with state television.

“If we don’t come with a tax law we will face these dangers. It will cost us dearly,” Razzaz said last week.

He said the tax bill would bring an extra 300 million dinars in revenue for the budget and avoid worsening a chronic 1.7 billion dinar budget shortfall.

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