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Topic: Italy says international tax dodger amnesty is bringing in billions - page 2. (Read 964 times)

legendary
Activity: 3752
Merit: 1217
So the Italian government received some €3.8 billion in penalties from tax dodgers, after the latter declared €59.5 billion worth of illegal assets? That corresponds to a penalty of less than 6% of the net value of the assets. Either this is a typo, or the Italian government gave in to the tax dodgers giving them a lucrative deal.
full member
Activity: 161
Merit: 100
No chance that'll ever happen in the USA. The banksters and the private jet tax dodgers they serve own the government. All of it.
sr. member
Activity: 254
Merit: 250
About €60bn in undeclared wealth disclosed – mostly hidden in Switzerland – with up to €4bn in tax and interest expected to be paid, says government

The Italian government said on Wednesday it was set to rake in at least €3.8bn euros (£2.75bn/US$4bn) after tax dodgers took advantage of an amnesty deal to declare money and assets hidden abroad.

The so-called voluntary disclosure programme, which was launched a year ago and ended on 30 November, brought to light nearly €60bn euros in undeclared wealth, the economy ministry said in a statement.

“The [resulting] tax revenues are estimated at around €3.8bn. With interest the final proceeds could easily reach around €4bn,” the statement said.

The Italian authorities received 130,000 voluntary declarations as a result of the scheme, amounting to a total of €59.5bn, it said.

Some 70% of that was hidden in Switzerland. To a lesser degree funds were also stashed in Monaco, the Bahamas, Singapore and Luxembourg, the ministry said.

“Unlike previous measures the taxpayer taking part in this scheme still has to pay the total tax and interest, it’s only the penalties that have been reduced,” the statement said.

The ministry hailed the voluntary cooperation scheme as a success, saying the “era of banking secrecy is over”.

“The relationship between the tax authorities and the taxpayers starts afresh with a renewed dialogue that will be based essentially on trust,” the ministry said.

The centre-left government in October approved a €27bn-€30bn budget designed to ensure a fledgling economic recovery takes wing in 2016 at the cost of slowing the reduction of the country’s massive €2.2tn debt.

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/dec/10/italy-says-international-tax-dodger-amnesty-is-bringing-in-billions

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