CONSUMERS could see the General Consumption Tax (GCT) they pay on goods drop to 12.5 per cent come next January. However, they will have to give up on the number of goods that they currently pay no tax on at all — which may include key food items that make up the staple of even the lowest income earner.
Yesterday, in Parliament, Finance Minister Audley Shaw tabled a raft of give-and-take tax-reform measures, which outline plans to effect changes to the GCT, implement a new tax at the ports while lowering common external tariffs (CET) on hundreds of items, lower personal and corporate income tax rates, and implement a new minimum business tax.
The Green Paper titled Tax Reform for Jamaica, said that most of the measures would require further assessment while it provided no set determination on the degree of change, but instead provided several alternative scenarios for each measure.
Read more: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/...#ixzz1M8oLjc3K
Yesterday, in Parliament, Finance Minister Audley Shaw tabled a raft of give-and-take tax-reform measures, which outline plans to effect changes to the GCT, implement a new tax at the ports while lowering common external tariffs (CET) on hundreds of items, lower personal and corporate income tax rates, and implement a new minimum business tax.
The Green Paper titled Tax Reform for Jamaica, said that most of the measures would require further assessment while it provided no set determination on the degree of change, but instead provided several alternative scenarios for each measure.
Read more: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/...#ixzz1M8oLjc3K
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