Tax Cuts Pending 20. júní 2006 12:53 According to sources close to Fréttablaðið, the tax-free yearly income ceiling could be raised up to nearly 95,000 ISK. In addition, child welfare payments - paid regularly by the state to nearly every parent in country for each child under 16 - could be extended until children are 18. Meanwhile, labour unions are fighting to reduce personal income tax from 38% to 15% for those with a yearly income of 150,000 or less. Tax cuts have already been made in the corporate sector - from 50% to 18% - and in capital gains tax, which is currently at 10%. Former Prime Minister Halldór Ásgrímsson told an economics conference last month that he would prefer to cut taxes than raise minimum wages, in response to increasing inflation. Current PM Geir H. Haarde is not expected to deviate from this policy. - pfn News News in English Mest lesið Halla slær á putta handboltahetjunnar Innlent „Ég á þetta og má þetta“ Innlent Samkomulagið veiti Bandaríkjunum aðgang að auðlindum Grænlands Erlent Viðurkenni nú að hafa beitt Íslendinga efnahagslegri hernaðaraðgerð Innlent „Ég framkvæmdi þetta af algjörri nauðsyn“ Innlent Nauðgaði konu og reyndi að færa henni blóm daginn eftir Innlent Samkomulagið sem ekkert samkomulag er um Erlent Handtóku fimm ára dreng og föður hans og sendu til Texas Erlent Rutte samdi ekki við Trump fyrir hönd danska konungsríkisins Erlent Drógu mann út á nærbuxunum sem hafði ekkert til saka unnið Erlent
According to sources close to Fréttablaðið, the tax-free yearly income ceiling could be raised up to nearly 95,000 ISK. In addition, child welfare payments - paid regularly by the state to nearly every parent in country for each child under 16 - could be extended until children are 18. Meanwhile, labour unions are fighting to reduce personal income tax from 38% to 15% for those with a yearly income of 150,000 or less. Tax cuts have already been made in the corporate sector - from 50% to 18% - and in capital gains tax, which is currently at 10%. Former Prime Minister Halldór Ásgrímsson told an economics conference last month that he would prefer to cut taxes than raise minimum wages, in response to increasing inflation. Current PM Geir H. Haarde is not expected to deviate from this policy. - pfn
News News in English Mest lesið Halla slær á putta handboltahetjunnar Innlent „Ég á þetta og má þetta“ Innlent Samkomulagið veiti Bandaríkjunum aðgang að auðlindum Grænlands Erlent Viðurkenni nú að hafa beitt Íslendinga efnahagslegri hernaðaraðgerð Innlent „Ég framkvæmdi þetta af algjörri nauðsyn“ Innlent Nauðgaði konu og reyndi að færa henni blóm daginn eftir Innlent Samkomulagið sem ekkert samkomulag er um Erlent Handtóku fimm ára dreng og föður hans og sendu til Texas Erlent Rutte samdi ekki við Trump fyrir hönd danska konungsríkisins Erlent Drógu mann út á nærbuxunum sem hafði ekkert til saka unnið Erlent