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Old 1st Jul 2012, 04:48
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gobbledock
 
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: Alabama, then Wyoming, then Idaho and now staying with Kharon on Styx houseboat
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Our father, who art in finance, give us our daily profit....

This is a good idea. Get rid of religions tax breaks or get rid of religion altogether and take what has been stashed and hoarded and give it the people!

Thursday,
February 16, 2012


Catholic
Monti moves to end Italy Church tax breaks


Reuters,
by Philip
Pullella
, ROME, Thu Feb 16, 2012

(Reuters) - Prime Minister Mario Monti, a Catholic crusading to put Italy's economy in order by ending entrenched privileges such as tax breaks, is striking against an unlikely target - his own Church.
Monti's government issued a statement on Wednesday night saying it
had informed the European Commission that it would pass a law ending the Church's exemption from local property taxes on its properties used for commercial purposes.

Estimates on how much this can bring to government coffers have
ranged from 700 million euros ($908 million) to more than 1 billion
euros.

Italy's Church - once an unshakable, and some say untouchable,
institution - has come under fire for what some consider unfair privileges at a time Monti has asked Italians to make unprecedented sacrifices as part of a "tears and blood" austerity plan to thwart a Greek-style crisis.


The European Commission in 2010 opened a probe against Italy to
determine if tax breaks for some Church properties amounted to illegal state aid and distorted competition.

Some political parties, particularly the tiny, liberal Radical
Party, and some intellectual leaders, have led a campaign to strip the Church of tax exemption on properties that are not used exclusively as places of worship.

Throughout Italy, the Church owns many private clinics, hotels, bed
and breakfasts and guest houses that enjoy tax exempt status because parts of the structures are occupied by priests or nuns or have a chapel for worship.

That created a grey area where many structures were essentially
commercial but covered by the religious exemption law.

The government statement said the proposal to be presented in
parliament would limit the tax exemption to structures that are "exclusively non-commercial." It did not say when it would present the bill.

In mixed-use cases, such as hotels run by nuns, the exemption will
apply only to the parts of the structures that are non-commercial, such as chapels and residences for priests and nuns, and the statement said the Economy Ministry - not the Church - would decide which is which.


CHURCH LEADERS NOT INFORMED Although contacts have been going on for a few months, Monti's move to take the bull by the horns surprised Italy's Catholic hierarchy."We are waiting to see the exact formulation of the text in order to provide a detailed judgment," the Italian bishops' conference said in a statement.
The Catholic Church is one of Italy's largest private real estate
holders and, if the Commission were to rule against Italy, Rome could be forced to order the Church to reimburse the government for unpaid taxes.

While the law would affect all religions, its impact on the relatively tiny property holdings of the Jewish and Muslim communities would be
negligible.

The controversy over Church tax exemptions had been bubbling for
years but boiled over in the past few months, particularly after the Monti government re-instated a local property tax on primary residences that had been abolished by his predecessor, Silvio Berlusconi.
In a 48-hour period after the austerity package was passed in December, more than 130,000 people signed an on-line petition demanding that the Church be stripped of much of its tax exempt status and pay its fair SHare.
At first, the Church dug in its heels, saying tax laws had to take
into consideration the social benefit of many of its activities.

But, as austerity began to bite into the budgets of ordinary
Italians who were forced to pay more taxes and delay their retirements, Italian Church leaders softened their stand and said they were willing to negotiate and rectify any past abuses.

(1 euro = $1.29820)
(Editing
by Alessandra Rizzo)
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