SaS: the government is planning new tax rates for personal income taxes

SaS: the government is planning new tax rates for personal income taxes
SaS: the government is planning new tax rates for personal income taxes
--

The government is planning to introduce new, more progressive taxation for personal income taxes, but this higher taxation means punishing successful people, Branislav Gröhling, president of the SaS, and Marián Viskupič, the party’s representative, said at their press conference on Friday. referring to plan. According to Viskupič, the highest income tax can be 32%.

“The government is planning new personal income tax rates. However, it will be successful. If you are clever and earn more, create value for the country, then the government cuts you off, imposes an extraordinary tax on you, because it wants to collect more money. These are the socialists. But they only bring poverty, nothing else,” Gröhling added.

“The material adopted by the government states that it will introduce steps for a more progressive and fairer tax system.

Translated into human language, this means that another tax increase is planned, which will affect all successful people. From 2025, there will be another personal income tax, even though there is already a 25% tax rate, which affects successful and skilled people to a certain extent,” detailed Viskupič.

The result, he says, will be that talented and successful people will leave the country, or leave the employment system and be taxed differently. “In the end, the state loses, punishes and loses successful people. For example, the highest tax rate in the Czech Republic is 23%, and in Slovakia it is already 25%. According to leaked information, the government is considering raising it to 32%,” added Viskupič.

(TASR/Felvidék.ma)


The article is in Hungarian

Hungary

Tags: SaS government planning tax rates personal income taxes

-

PREV Tomorrow’s IPL Match: MI vs KKR – who’ll win Mumbai vs Kolkata clash? Fantasy team, pitch report and more
NEXT China-Russia military exercises near Taiwan force US to revise plans, intelligence chiefs say