Indonesia launches tax amnesty to boost economy

Deutsche Welle
2 Min Read

Indonesia has introduced a tax amnesty as the government hopes to lure back capital parked abroad by wealthy citizens. But the measure has faced criticism from people unwilling to let evaders off the hook.
The Indonesian government said Tuesday it believed the nine-month tax amnesty could bring in 165 trillion rupiah ($12.4 billion, 11.2 billion euros) by offering low rates to those coming forward to declare untaxed money.

Many wealthy Indonesians have long chosen to stash billions of dollars abroad, particularly in neighboring Singapore, to avoid tax payments.

Parliament approved the amnesty after months of wrangling, with all but one of the 10 parties in the legislature backing the measure.

People willing to declare their untaxed wealth would be offered a rate of between 2 percent and 10 percent, far below the 30 percent top income tax rate for individuals, Jakarta said.

Badly needed resources

Finance Minister Bambang Brodjonegoro said he hoped some capital currently parked abroad would “now enter Indonesia’s financial system and boost economic growth.”

President Joko Widodo looks desperate for extra money to fund infrastructure projects as investment falls due to a slowing global economy.

But the bill has faced criticism from the public, with people arguing the legislation means that tax evaders will go unpunished, and that it is unfair to those who have honestly paid their taxes.

hg/jd (AFP, Reuters)

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