By Chana Ya’ar, INN
The
government on Monday passed a sweeping measure to tighten Israel’s belt
at a time when the world is facing another global financial crisis.
With
a vote of 20 to 9, the Cabinet approved a package of austerity measures
designed to raise some NIS 14.15 billion within a year, and reduce the
budget deficit by 1.5 percent. Voting against the package were the
Independence and Shas parties, as well as Likud Social Services Minister
Moshe Kahlon.
The measures include raising taxes, increasing fines and cutting budgets.
Tax Hikes and Fines
Extending the “temporary” order issued in February 2011 to raise the purchase tax on investment
apartments. A 5% tax on properties costing up to NIS 1 million, and 7%
on properties costing NIS 3 million and above, will be in effect until
the end of 2013.
The so-called “Green Tax” on sales of vehicles
according to their pollution levels is also set to be updated in
accordance with Environmental Protection Ministry data.
The
purchase tax on cigarettes and cigars was increased – last week – from
260.6% to 278.6%. the purchase tax on beer went up from NIS 2.18 per
liter to NIS 4.19 per liter.
In addition the Value Added Tax (sales tax) will rise by a single percentage point to 17% by this Wednesday.
Fines are to be increased on businesses caught making black market deals.
Starting
January 1, 2013, income tax will change for everyone except those in
the two lowest income brackets – at 10% and 14% — and in the highest
income bracket at 48%.
For those in the fourth-highest monthly
income bracket (NIS 8,881 – NIS 14,430) taxes will rise from 21% to 22%.
Those who make Nis 67,000 per month or more will have their income tax
raised by 2%.
Those in the second and third-highest income bracket will have their taxes raised by 1%, to 31% and 34% respectively.
Employer contributions to Bituach Leumi – the National Insurance
Institute (NII) – will rise for workers earning more than 60% of the
average salary, from 5.9% to 6.5% in 2013, then to 7% in 2014, and then
to 7.5% in 2015.
Ministry Budgets Cut
There
will be an across-the-board 5% budget cut in every ministry for the
remainder of 2012, according to the plan. Next year, budgets will be cut
by an additional 3%.
One ministry escaped the slashes – the Education Ministry, which suffered only a 1% cut this year and a 3% cut in 2013.
The
cuts are to fund “changes in priorities,” according to Prime Minister
Binyamin Netanyahu and Finance Minister Yuval Steinitz.
Some NIS 700 million will be allocated to fund three of those “priorities” –
1. preparing the Home Front for a national emergency
2. reforming the national firefighting system
3. preventing infiltration of illegal migrants from the Sinai Peninsula
Not All Bad News
But Netanyahu promised that any agreement on social action deals resulting from the Trajtenberg Report would stand.
Those
include the NIS 800 per month to be saved by some 300,000 families who
send their 3 and 4 year old children to free nursery schools, and the
new free after-school programs to be implemented in September for children ages 3 to 9.
Close to 400,000 families will also still be eligible to receive hundreds of shekels in tax credits, Netanyahu said.
He
also agreed that the package was “harsh” in his remarks at the opening
of the weekly cabinet meeting. But, he warned, “Governments that did not
act in time, did not take determined action and did not act responsibly
caused great harm to their people both in terms of mass unemployment
and in terms of crumbling social systems.
“We will not allow that to happen. I will not allow that to happen. We need to act responsibly, with determination and in time.”
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