BULGARIAN REVERSAL (Update)
27 November 2009
What the PM wants, the PM gets....
Late Thursday saw a stunning reversal of a decision by
Bulgarian parliamentarians to limit taxation on gambling
to 12 percent (see previous InfoPowa reports) in
defiance of the prime minister's call for a 15 percent
rate.
Prime Minister Boyko Borisov was, as we
reported earlier, less than pleased with the 12 percent
move and vowed to reverse it....and reverse it he did,
pushing MPs in a second reading to vote for the 15
percent rate he needed to balance cuts in alcohol and
mortgage taxation areas.
The vote was apparently
unanimous, with all 149 MPs present in agreement.
The Novinite news agency reports that BGN 150
million will be raised from the gambling tax in 2010.
The decision did not please everyone; Bulgarian
business mogul Vasil Bozhkov slammed the increased tax
in a television interview, using some provocative
language in describing the politicians involved. Bozhkov
is believed in many quarters to be Bulgaria's richest
man and was at one time involved in the gambling
business.
He told the Pro.bg TV television
interviewer: “Under pressure by an unbalanced Finance
Minister and Ivan Kostov, an outright lier and the
father of corruption in Bulgaria, a genocide against the
Bulgarian business is being performed. This is not just
with respect to gambling, this is a genocide against the
whole business sector in a time of crisis.”
The
Finance Minister referred to is Simeon Djankov and Ivan
Kostov is the former PM and current co-chair of the
rightist Blue Coalition, which supports the GERB
government of Borisov.
Bozhkov's thoughts on the
issue follow warnings by the Bulgarian Association for
Entertainment and Gambling Games that even the former 12
percent rate would cause the collapse of the gambling
industry and the loss of 40 000 jobs.
Presenting
a different and more supportive view for the hike, MP
Iskra Fidosova from the GERB ruling party pointed to
Finance Minister Simeon Djankov's study which indicated
that Bulgarians are generally negative towards gambling.
Only 10 percent think that gambling operators should be
favoured, whereas 60 percent are in favour of higher
gambling tax, with opinions varying that it should be
between 14 - 20 percent.
MP Aliosman Imamov from
the ethnic Turkish Movement for Rights and Freedoms said
the major problem in the gambling sector was not the
size of the tax but weak regulation which would prevent
the generation of the projected tax revenues.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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