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Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

Welcome to the Neno's Place!

Neno's Place Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality


Neno

I can be reached by phone or text 8am-7pm cst 972-768-9772 or, once joining the board I can be reached by a (PM) Private Message.

Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

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Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

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    Fees and taxes in billions of unknown fate after the end of the budget law

    Rocky
    Rocky
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    Fees and taxes in billions of unknown fate after the end of the budget law Empty Fees and taxes in billions of unknown fate after the end of the budget law

    Post by Rocky Sun 15 Jan 2023, 5:14 am

    [size=38]Fees and taxes in billions of unknown fate after the end of the budget law[/size]


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    January 15, 2023[You must be registered and logged in to see this link.]
    Baghdad / Obelisk: Iraqis feel that they pay fees and taxes through ministries and other government institutions, without the required level of services, infrastructure and speed of completion, while MP Muhammad Al-Khafaji criticized the collection of fees and taxes from citizens in light of the faltering approval of the 2023 budget.
    Al-Khafaji said that billions of dinars are taken from citizens under the title (fees and taxes) without any legal basis after the end of the budget law on December 31 without approving the budget for the following year.
    He added: The work of the general budget law ends with the end of the fiscal year on 12/31, and therefore the collection of any money, taxes or fees fixed in it must be stopped, as it is a clear and explicit legal violation, even if those amounts were received as deposits!
    The Iraqi journalist interested in economic affairs, Shahad Al-Enezi, talks about that the ministries in Iraq are saturated with fees and taxes to reap billions, and from that the Ministry of Oil raised the prices of gasoline, as well as the Traffic Department imposing a tremor, as the number of cars in Iraq has reached 4 million cars, which means 120 billion dinars annually. This is not the fees for replacing plates, annual renewal, and fines, and the citizen is forced to pay 0
    Attention is still awaiting the completion of the draft financial budget for the year 2023, after its absence in 2022 due to the political crisis.
    Basically, many Iraqis express their dissatisfaction with the fees and taxes imposed on them, while some ignore paying the taxes incurred.
    The reason for ignoring the payment of taxes and fees is due to poor services and sometimes their absence, which if the government is committed to providing them as it should.
    To put an end to what Iraqis now describe as "collective indifference," the government has taken measures to motivate citizens to pay, including not transferring homes when they are sold to a buyer until the utility bills owed by their owners are paid.
    Citizen Abu Muhammad Al-Khafaji says that the concept of fees and taxes was set in exchange for a service that the citizen receives, and it is known that it generates large profits for the state. To invest it again for the benefit of the citizen, but the result is a major government failure and slackness in providing services, since 2003, so how can citizens pay the fees?
    Iraqis suffer from frequent power outages, followed by water outages.
    Al-Khafaji points out that other burdens borne by citizens also caused their reluctance to pay.
    The economist, Abd al-Salam Hassan, holds the government responsible for the citizens' reluctance to pay taxes, saying that the poor services provided prompted citizens to do so. The electricity file is transferred to the owners of the generators.
    And the former Minister of Finance, Muhammad Allawi, talks about monthly revenues that were not included in the state treasury, about 600 billion dinars from tax revenues, and 250 billion dinars are the funds collected by the government, 450 billion dinars from traffic departments, and 690 billion dinars from air, rail and land transport, and the passage of aircraft over the sky. Iraq, as well as 900 billion dinars selling wheat.
     
    Prepared by Sajjad Al-Khafaji
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      Current date/time is Mon 16 Sep 2024, 2:55 pm