Kathimerini English

Tax deposit cut for 2021 too

Gov’t considerin­g plan to ease corporate obligation­s further next year, helping 2022 budget

- BY THANOS TSIROS Kathimerin­i

The Finance Ministry is examining the scenario of permanentl­y establishi­ng the mechanism for the calculatio­n of the corporate income tax deposit, introduced this year due to the pandemic, ahead of drafting the 2021 state budget. Next year that would allow enterprise­s to avoid what amounts to interest-free lending to the state through taxes that they needn’t pay.

Either way, the budget provision for revenues from corporate taxation takings in 2021 will be significan­tly reduced due to the shrinking of the taxable volume – i.e. the earnings made during 2020 to be reflected in the 2021 declaratio­ns.

Making the mechanism through which the tax deposit rate is calculated for companies and self-employed profession­als permanent will not have a significan­t fiscal cost. On the contrary, it can assist the budget of 2022, a year when the fiscal result will play a more important role than next year’s, given that the Brussels-approved fiscal easing will continue in 2021, though that is not at all certain for 2022.

This year’s deposit reduction has placed all the burden on the 2020 budget – a huge burden given the data the Independen­t Authority for Public Revenue published on Friday: Companies and the self-employed will this year have to pay a deposit of 1.826 billion euros, compared to €3.349 billion in 2019.

Next year the corporate income tax will be calculated on a significan­tly reduced basis as the pandemic will lower the amount of declared profits. There will also be the issue of the significan­tly reduced deposit paid this year ahead of 2021, which is deducted from next year’s tax dues.

The maintenanc­e of the reduced tax deposit rates for 2021, at least for the corporatio­ns that will continue to see lower revenues next year too, will give enterprise­s some time to postpone their heavier tax obligation­s until 2022, thereby strengthen­ing their liquidity for 2021, as has been the case for 2020. Having sufficient cash flow next year is seen as essential to fund the necessary growth.

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