After a three-day emergency cabinet meeting over the weekend, Viktor Orban, the prime minister, announced the government's new economic programme this afternoon. The battered forint quickly jumped almost 2% in response. ...The introduction of a 16% flat personal income tax is a daring move, and could have important repercussions beyond balancing the state's books. Unemployment, or at least that element of it which is declared, is nudging 12%, and one reason is Hungary's cumbersome bureacracy and heavy tax burden. Now Mr Orban has announced that corporation tax for companies with annual profits of less than 500m forints will be reduced from 19% to 10%. Ten more small and bothersome taxes are set to be abolished altogether.A few years ago, when several nations each year were adopting the flat tax, I arbitrarily decided that this rock classic would be the theme song of the tax reform movement. Any better suggestions?
Tuesday, June 8, 2010
Dan Mitchell Gets Results
I gave a speech in Hungary about two weeks ago and now the government has announced a big step in the direction of better fiscal policy. According to Reuters, "Hungary's new government plans to introduce a flat personal income tax of 16 percent from 2011, as well as a 15 percent cut in public sector wages." Those are the headline initiatives, but the fiscal reform package includes other good policies. Here's a blurb from the economist.
Labels:
Big Government,
Bureaucracy,
Flat tax,
government spending,
Hungary,
Tax reform
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