Greece is planning to hold talks with representatives from the troika, who will be in Athens on Monday for the latest review of the country’s fiscal adjustments program, on the idea of offering incentives to Greeks to bring their undeclared money back from abroad.
Kathimerini understands the government wants to create a scheme whereby Greeks with deposits abroad pay a relatively small fine to bring funds back as long as it is for investment purposes. The government wants to ensure such an initiative is not perceived to be a form of amnesty for tax evaders, so apart from linking the incentive to investment in the Greek economy, it also plans to announce it at the same time as the creation of Greece’s first assets register, which will be used as a tool to clamp down on tax dodgers.
However, it is not clear if the troika will accept such a proposal. In November, the government had proposed that Greeks seeking to repatriate undeclared earnings pay a fine amounting to 8 percent of the total to avoid any further legal action or penalties. The troika rejected the suggestion.
EU Task Force officials had suggested at the time that such a measure could only be accepted if Greece’s tax inspection system was able to pursue all those with undeclared assets who did not take up the amnesty offer.
The Athens Exchange and the American-Hellenic Chamber are organizing the second investors’ forum in New York next month with the participation of 28 companies listed on the local bourse, up ...
Taxpayers with just one source of annual income will not need to submit an income tax declaration as of next year according to the draft of the new tax code.
According to the new set of regu...
PAOK recovered some of the ground lost in the Super League playoffs by beating fellow Champions League-spot contender Asteras 2-1 at Tripoli on Wednesday, while PAS Giannina and Atromitos sh...
The league that in the last three years has produced the European basketball champion entered its playoffs on Tuesday and Wednesday with the first games of the quarterfinal round, with AGO R...
One of the biggest problems dragging the Greek economy down is the pressure placed on entrepreneurs aspiring to do business in sectors dominated by the “pirates” and “pimps” of the business ...
Greek taxpayers have had to pay dozens of millions of euros for the restoration and conservation of the capital’s landmark buildings, including Athens Polytechnic and the so-called neoclassi...