Tag: tax

  • These 14 EVs are the only ones left that get the tax credit

    These 14 EVs are the only ones left that get the tax credit

    [ad_1]

    lebanon e motor show 05833

    Under the tightened restrictions, electric and plug-in-hybrid vehicles can get the full tax credit only if the vehicles are made in North America, and only if most of their batteries and critical minerals come from the United States or its closest trading partners.

    In the long run, the limits are intended to foster the creation of jobs and a vast new clean-energy industry inside the United States, as Congress was seeking when it enacted Democrats’ climate law last year. But for now, it will limit the choices of consumers hoping the tax breaks can make EVs more affordable — and it will further rile European governments whose automakers all failed to make the cut.

    Treasury’s guidance was posted in Monday’s Federal Register and the list of qualifying vehicles went up on the IRS website as well as the Energy Department’s fueleconomy.gov page Monday morning. Though the list was released by Treasury, automakers submit which of their vehicles qualify based on federal guidance, under penalty of perjury.

    An administration official called the new list a “clear and workable” interpretation of the domestic-sourcing requirements that Congress imposed when it passed the Inflation Reduction Act in August. The official — speaking on condition of anonymity under the administration’s ground rules — estimated that nearly 60 percent of electric vehicle sales from the first quarter of the year would have met the new requirements.

    The restrictions are meant to prevent China, which dominates the global production of electric vehicle batteries and the minerals that go into them, from controlling the rising electric vehicle market.

    The limits may ease in coming years as foreign automakers such as Hyundai and Nissan build factories in the U.S. to meet the Treasury Department’s new requirements. New, compliant models will come online in the coming months and years, and companies are racing to build battery and EV facilities in the United States to comply with the rules. The U.S. and the European Union are also holding trade talks in hopes of allowing minerals from EU countries to count toward the sourcing rules. But those rules will tighten each year, potentially shutting out some vehicles.

    Even so, the dramatic shrinking of the tax credit’s availability from what it was mere days ago is a blow to automakers hoping for a solid return on their investment of more than $100 billion into EVs, even as their sticker prices generally remain much higher than those of traditional gasoline-powered vehicles. It also represents at least a temporary, self-imposed obstacle for President Joe Biden’s goal of pushing for a major shift from fossil fuels to electric.

    Just last week, the Environmental Protection Agency proposed a new fuel economy mandate aimed at pushing a huge increase in electric vehicle production, with the aim of EVs accounting for two-thirds of new car and light truck sales by 2032. It’s unclear whether that goal is achievable with so few EVs qualifying for the incentives.

    Under the new Treasury list, seven models will be eligible for the full, $7,500 tax credit and six will qualify for a $3,750 half-credit, depending on whether their battery minerals, their battery components, or both meet the domestic content rules. Tesla’s least expensive vehicle, the Model 3, falls in between the two categories — a rear-wheel-drive version starting at $41,990 gets only half the credit while its performance model gets the whole $7,500 credit.

    Three more Chevrolet models from General Motors will qualify as well after they come onto the market later this year — electric models of the Blazer, Silverado and the Equinox. They are all expected to be eligible for the full, $7,500 tax credit, Treasury said.

    Another wrinkle: Just two EVs now on the market will be available for less than $25,000 after the tax credit is deducted — the Bolt, whose cost could fall to $19,000 thanks to the tax break, and a utility vehicle version of the Bolt, which could drop to $20,300. That’s assuming buyers can actually find the vehicles at that price in today’s post-pandemic seller’s market.

    Republicans have pointed to the high relative cost of electric vehicles as evidence that the Biden administration’s push to coax Americans to give up their fossil-fuel cars ignores ordinary people’s economic realities.

    “The average price of an electric vehicle was roughly $65,000 last year, more than the household income of 46 percent of American families,” West Virginia Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, the top Republican on the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, said in response to the proposed EPA rules last week.

    [ad_2]
    #EVs #left #tax #credit
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Indian-origin man pleads guilty to tax evasion in US

    Indian-origin man pleads guilty to tax evasion in US

    [ad_1]

    New York: An Indian-American tax return preparer faces a maximum penalty of five years in prison after pleading guilty to evading assessment of his personal federal income taxes.

    Samir Patel of Statesboro, Georgia, was a tax return preparer at a national return preparation business from 1999 to 2021, according to court documents.

    In 2015, he purchased a franchise of the business in Claxton, and as its owner, he hired, trained and supervised tax preparers, and continued to prepare returns for customers.

    MS Education Academy

    He, however, willfully filed false income tax returns that underreported his income and evaded proper assessment of his personal taxes for years 2015, 2016, and 2017, a Department of Justice release stated.

    He faces a maximum penalty of five years in prison, as well as a period of supervised release, restitution and monetary penalties.

    The District Court Chief Judge J Randal Hall for the Southern District of Georgia will determine any sentence after considering the US Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.

    Subscribe us on The Siasat Daily - Google News

    [ad_2]
    #Indianorigin #man #pleads #guilty #tax #evasion

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • UAE announces corporate tax registration exemptions

    UAE announces corporate tax registration exemptions

    [ad_1]

    Abu Dhabi: The United Arab Emirates (UAE) has announced that certain businesses are exempt from registering for corporate tax that will be introduced in June this year, the Emirates News Agency (WAM) reported.

    The Ministry of Finance has issued Ministerial Decision No. 43 of 2023 on the exception from tax registration on Monday, April 9.

    Here are the UAE corporate tax registration exemptions.

    Those exempt include government entities, government-controlled entities, extractive companies, and non-extractive natural resource companies that meet the necessary requirements under the corporate tax law.

    MS Education Academy

    In addition, non-residents who earn income from UAE sources only and do not have a permanent establishment in the UAE are exempt from registering for corporate tax.

    Other exemptions are available for organizations such as pension or investment funds and public benefit organizations.

    The decision is in line with international best practices, as people are exempted from corporate tax such as the federal government, government departments and agencies in the UAE, public institutions and other categories.

    As long as these entities continue to meet the exemption conditions specified in the relevant articles of the Decree-Law, there is no need to register with the Federal Tax Authority.

    Subscribe us on The Siasat Daily - Google News

    [ad_2]
    #UAE #announces #corporate #tax #registration #exemptions

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Olaf Scholz faces new probe over German tax fraud scandal

    Olaf Scholz faces new probe over German tax fraud scandal

    [ad_1]

    Press play to listen to this article

    Voiced by artificial intelligence.

    BERLIN — Germany’s center-right opposition wants to raise the heat on Chancellor Olaf Scholz by launching a parliamentary investigation into his alleged connection to a massive tax evasion scandal.

    The case — which dates back over five years to the time when Scholz was still mayor of the Hamburg city-state — is linked to the broader so-called “Cum Ex” affair, under which the German state was defrauded by over €30 billion as some banks, companies, or individuals claimed tax reimbursements from authorities for alleged costs that never occurred.

    The scandal already hung over the Social Democratic politician’s election campaign in 2021 but had little impact in the end as Scholz’s potential involvement remained unclear. Now it is heating up again after new details emerged that put his previous defense in question.

    The Hamburg regional parliament plans to summon Scholz this spring — which will be for the third time — to an investigative committee looking into the scandal. And now the center-right CDU/CSU bloc also wants to set up an inquiry at the national level in the Bundestag.

    “We will request a parliamentary committee of inquiry into the Scholz-Warburg tax affair in the German Bundestag in the first parliamentary week after the Easter vacations,” said the CDU’s Mathias Middelberg, deputy parliamentary group chairman, on Tuesday.

    A government spokesperson said that “as a matter of principle,” Berlin does not comment on decisions announced by Bundestag members “out of respect for the constitutional body,” according to media reports.

    Katja Mast, the Social Democrats’ chief whip, said the CDU/CSU is not following any interest in knowledge, but rather party tactical interests. “They bring up allegations that have long been refuted,” she said, adding that the committee in Hamburg had clarified all questions.

    The CDU/CSU group has enough votes in parliament to be able to set up an investigative committee. The Left party also said it would back such a request. Parliamentary investigative committees can hear witnesses and experts and request access to documents. Although the findings are summarized in a non-binding report, the political consequences, such as for upcoming elections, could be significant.

    In a letter to the CDU/CSU parliamentary group seen by POLITICO, chairmen Friedrich Merz and Alexander Dobrindt said that the case should be investigated due to its “significant” importance for German national politics.

    Scholz has come under scrutiny because of his links to one Hamburg-based bank involved in the tax evasion scheme: During his time as mayor, he met on three separate occasions in private with one of the owners of the M.M. Warburg & Co. bank, which was already under investigation at the time by the Hamburg tax office. Officials were planning to reclaim €47 million, which they believed were ill-gotten gains in connection with the fraud.

    However, in the end, the finance authority let the statute of limitations on the payment demand expire — and years later, after details of Scholz’s meetings with the banker emerged, critics began questioning whether the top Social Democrat might have intervened in favor of the bank.

    Although the chancellor has constantly denied having intervened, he has also given no answer on what was discussed during the private meetings. Instead, Scholz said on several occasions during the past two-and-a-half years that he cannot remember the content of the discussions.

    GettyImages 1242588238
    During his time as mayor of the Hamburg city-state, Scholz met with one of the owners of the M.M. Warburg & Co. Bank, involved in a tax evasion scheme | Morris MacMatzen/Getty Images

    That defense is now being called into question as details emerged of a previous and longtime confidential Bundestag committee hearing with Scholz in July 2020, in which he appeared to easily remember details of his meetings with the banker. His critics argue that Scholz only started to claim having no memory of the meetings when their political and possibly criminal explosiveness became clear.

    “This comprehensive memory gap of the chancellor after an initial memory of a concrete meeting … raises a multitude of questions to be clarified,” the letter from the CDU/CSU states.

    Scholz and his allies have repeatedly rejected such criticism as politically motivated and stressed that past investigations found no wrongdoing. Scholz also highlighted that in the end, the bank did repay the €47 million, albeit only after it was ordered to do so by a court. The Hamburg Public Prosecutor’s Office said in March that it does not see any initial suspicion against the chancellor in the affair.

    That hasn’t discouraged the opposition from planning to dig deeper, though.

    “The chancellor would like to see … a line drawn under the clarification of this tax affair. But it is precisely the task of parliament to control the government, to look closely, especially with so many unanswered questions,” said CDU lawmaker Matthias Hauer.



    [ad_2]
    #Olaf #Scholz #faces #probe #German #tax #fraud #scandal
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.eu )

  • Dubai court rejects Sanjay Shah’s appeal in tax fraud case; to extradite him

    Dubai court rejects Sanjay Shah’s appeal in tax fraud case; to extradite him

    [ad_1]

    Dubai: The Dubai Court of Cassation has rejected the appeal of British-Indian Sanjay Shah, who is wanted by Danish authorities on charges of money laundering and committing tax fraud to the tune of $1.7 billion.

    In doing so, it upheld the Dubai Court of Appeal’s ruling last year to grant Denmark’s request for his extradition.

    “Chancellor Essam Issa Al Humaidan, Attorney General of Dubai, announced that Dubai Court of Cassation has rejected the appeal of Sanjay Shah, a British national wanted by Danish authorities, and Sanjay Shah can be extradited to Denmark over fraud and money laundering charges,” the Dubai government’s media office announced on Twitter.

    MS Education Academy

    Shah, 52, a hedge fund trader who lived on The Palm Jumeirah, was arrested by Dubai Police in June last year following Denmark’s extradition petition.

    His fraud scheme involved submitting thousands of applications to the Danish Treasury on behalf of investors and companies from several countries around the world in order to receive dividend tax refunds, according to Dubai Police.

    The Dubai Courts had initially rejected Denmark’s extradition request.

    Attorney General Chancellor Essam Issa Al Humaidan appealed the decision in accordance with the Law of International Judicial Cooperation, and the Dubai Court of Cassation has now upheld the decision to extradite the suspect to Denmark, according to a statement.

    Shah is accused of masterminding a scam, which ran for three years since 2012, has been described as one of the largest fraud cases in Denmark’s history.

    His fraud scheme involved submitting thousands of applications to the Danish Treasury on behalf of investors and companies from several countries around the world in order to receive dividend tax refunds, according to a Dubai Police statement.

    [ad_2]
    #Dubai #court #rejects #Sanjay #Shahs #appeal #tax #fraud #case #extradite

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Treasury imposes binding rules on tax breaks for electric cars

    Treasury imposes binding rules on tax breaks for electric cars

    [ad_1]

    “We know that in order to meet our energy security, climate and economic goals, we need to build a clean energy supply chain that is not dependent on China,” a senior Treasury official said, speaking anonymously as part of the administration’s ground rules during a call with reporters.

    The sourcing requirements will temporarily reduce the number of vehicles eligible for the full incentives, the official conceded. “However, we believe these requirements will significantly increase the number of vehicles made and sold in the U.S. over the next decade as new investments and American production come online.”

    For now, though, it’s unclear whether the Treasury rules will prove so restrictive for automakers that it stunts sales of electric vehicles. That would be a major blow to Biden’s goal of having zero-emission vehicles account for half of all new U.S. car and truck sales by 2030.

    The department’s list of eligible vehicles is expected by April 18 and will be updated monthly, officials said on the call.

    The administration’s early attempts to navigate the climate law’s requirements have drawn accusations from EU officials that the U.S. is applying the made-in-America requirements too restrictively. But some U.S. lawmakers including Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) have charged that Biden is offering too much leeway to foreign suppliers, in defiance of the statute.

    “It is horrific that the Administration continues to ignore the purpose of the law which is to bring manufacturing back to America and ensure we have reliable and secure supply chains,” Manchin, who wrote much of the law, said in a statement Friday. He called the Treasury proposal “a pathetic excuse to spend more tax payer dollars as quickly as possible,” adding that it “further cedes control to the Chinese Communist Party in the process.”

    But the reality is that the climate law has already ruled out the full tax credit for the vast majority of electric vehicles now on the market, the head of one automotive trade group said — and the Treasury guidance will take even more off the table. The question is whether the long-term growth that the administration envisions will come to pass.

    “Given the constraints of the legislation, Treasury’s done as well as it could to produce rules that meet the statute and reflect the current market,” said John Bozzella, CEO of the Alliance for Automotive Innovation.

    What Treasury’s proposal does

    The climate law, known as the Inflation Reduction Act, offers a credit of up to $7,500 for electric vehicles that meet stringent production requirements.

    For a vehicle to be eligible, at least half of its battery components must be made in North America. In addition, at least 40 percent of the battery’s critical minerals must be either sourced domestically — extracted or processed in the U.S. or recycled in North America — or in a country with which the U.S. has a free trade agreement. Those percentages will increase annually under the law, beginning next year.

    Vehicles can qualify for half the credit if they meet either the battery or critical minerals requirement.

    The vehicle itself must be assembled in the United States.

    Until now, though, U.S. carmakers rushing to develop their domestic supply chains haven’t known exactly how the Internal Revenue Service intends to carry out the law’s sourcing requirements.

    Treasury’s guidance was originally due in December, but the department postponed the proposal’s release until Friday. In the meantime, it allowed the credit to go into effect without any restrictions on where a vehicle was produced — a move that incensed Manchin. Since January, electric vehicle buyers have been able to receive the credit as long as they did not exceed an income threshold and the car was below a certain price.

    In April, the requirements get a lot tighter. The new Treasury rules apply to vehicles picked up by their owners on or after April 17, even though they won’t be final until at least June.

    Automakers get some leeway

    Now that the guidance is out, automakers must determine how their complex supply chains align with the sourcing rules. The carmakers will certify to the IRS each month which of their vehicle models qualify, and the agency will update a list on its website, the officials said.

    The Treasury document offers some olive branches to automakers worried about the rules being overly restrictive.

    For instance, the department provided flexibility in how it interprets the IRA’s requirements regarding trade partners and the sourcing of powders contained in battery electrodes. The administration sees this leeway as critical to keeping sales of electric vehicles growing while automakers race to create domestic supply chains.

    Some of those interpretations angered Manchin, who in recent days threatened to take the administration to court if it opened the door too much to supplies from abroad.

    In contrast, Democratic Rep. Dan Kildee from auto-industry-heavy Michigan told POLITICO last week that he was “looking for the broadest application possible” of the sourcing rules, and was “just hopeful that there isn’t an unnecessary narrowing of the credit to the point that it’s really not substantial.” He said he thought Manchin “may not have fully understood the implications of what that language was going to mean.”

    Kildee said he’d support revisiting the language in the law, but that it wasn’t likely to be loosened while Republicans control the House.

    “Look, we’ve got two problems,” said his fellow Michigan Democratic Rep. Debbie Dingell. “We can’t be dependent upon China. And we’ve got to make [electric] vehicles affordable.”

    No quick end to tensions with Europe

    In one of the most eagerly anticipated aspects of the guidance, the Treasury Department opened the door for a broader range of U.S. allies to qualify as trading partners under the critical minerals requirement. Those could eventually include the European Union, although the proposal released Friday doesn’t say that explicitly.

    Under Treasury’s rules, automakers will be able to obtain critical minerals from the 20 countries with which the U.S. has formal trade agreements, including Chile and Australia, two of the top sources of lithium needed for electric vehicles batteries. The EU has no such agreement with the U.S., so for now it’s excluded.

    Canada, Mexico, Israel and South Korea are also on the initial list of countries that can supply minerals for vehicles eligible for the tax break.

    But the guidance released Friday also allows countries to qualify for the credit if they have made narrower agreements with the U.S. on trade in critical minerals. Japan signed such an agreement this week, allowing Treasury to add it to its list of approved suppliers.

    Trade negotiators from the U.S. and Europe are trying to work out a similar agreement. The two sides hope to complete it by the time Treasury publishes the final guidance.

    Manchin said in January that when he crafted the critical minerals language, he was unaware that the U.S. and EU lacked a formal free trade agreement. He said he supports opening the credit to allies — but he draws the line at any interpretation of the law that allows Chinese companies to be involved in the supply chain for eligible vehicles.

    In the meantime, automakers including German giant Volkswagen have announced plans to expand in North America, seeking certainty their models will qualify for the incentives.

    In 2024 and 2025, the credit will become even more stringent as provisions go into effect prohibiting the sourcing of any battery parts and critical minerals from “foreign entities of concern” — which most likely will include China. That could be a significant new hurdle, given that many top mining companies are partially Chinese-owned or process their minerals in China.

    The climate law does not spell out exactly which countries — or companies with partial foreign ownership — would fall under the “concern” label, and automakers were eagerly anticipating such an interpretation as part of Friday’s guidance.

    Administration officials said on the call, however, that guidance on the “foreign entities of concern” provision would not be released until later this year. Some industry watchers believe it could align with stringent guidance issued by Treasury last week that defines “foreign entities of concern” under the CHIPS and Science Act.

    Some crucial details

    Much of Friday’s proposed rule hews closely to interpretations that Treasury offered in a white paper outlining its thinking last year.

    As in the white paper, the proposed guidance Friday defines the metal powders contained in an EV battery’s electrodes as “critical minerals,” rather than “battery components.” That’s a vital distinction because those powders are almost exclusively processed in Asia. Defining them as battery components would have imposed even more severe restrictions on vehicles eligible for the credit.

    Some battery companies and Manchin had made an 11th-hour push to reverse the interpretation, arguing it would determine whether entire factories and thousands of jobs end up in the U.S. or other countries. The electrode powders make up most of the value of a battery.

    The Treasury guidance draws a distinction between two parts of the battery-making process — the sourcing of the minerals, and the manufacturing of the batteries, including cell and battery assembly. It places the powders into the former category, increasing the number of countries that can provide them.

    The guidance also lays out a multi-step process for verifying the critical mineral and battery component percentages required to qualify for the credit, a daunting issue given the complexity of the supply chain. Automakers will have to certify under penalty of perjury that their cars qualify.

    What’s next

    Treasury will publish the guidance proposal in the Federal Register on April 17, launching a 60-day comment period before Treasury issues final guidance.

    Treasury is also set to release guidance in the coming months on IRA tax credits for other clean energy industries, and the interpretations taken in the proposed electric vehicle guidelines could be applied to those tax credits.

    Tanya Snyder contributed to this report.

    [ad_2]
    #Treasury #imposes #binding #rules #tax #breaks #electric #cars
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Big Update Regarding Property Tax In J&K: LG Manoj Sinha – Kashmir News

    [ad_1]

    Srinagar, Mar 29: Jammu & Kashmir’s Lieutenant Governor Manoj Sinha on Wednesday said that genuine suggestions of the public on imposition of property tax in Jammu & Kashmir would be considered.

    Addressing a news conference in Jammu, as per (KNO), Sinha said that suggestions submitted by the people would be analysed and those found genuine would be considered.

    News WhatsApp Group Links – Join Now

    The LG said that Jammu & Kashmir was the last state/UT to impose property tax and the rates in the UT are much lower than the rates applicable in cities of neighbouring States. “If we compare the rates with Shimla, Chandigarh and Dehradun, these are less than 1/10th of the rates applicable in these cities,” he said, adding that 40 percent people living in urban areas of J&K are exempted from paying property taxes.

    “There are 520000 houses in urban areas of Jammu & Kashmir. Out of them, 206000 are exempted from property tax,” he said.

    Govt Orders New school timing from April 1 In Kashmir Schools – Check Order Copy Here

    He said that 203600 houses would have to pay a maximum Rs 1000 per annum as property tax in certain areas of Srinagar and Jammu. “If we look at other towns, they will have to pay Rs 600, Rs 500 per year,” he said.

    It is worthwhile to mention that the J & K administration has sought feedback from the general public over imposition of property tax in the Union Territory—(KNO)

    FOR FULL 👉: CLICK HERE

    CLICK HERE TO: DOWNLOAD OUR MOBILE APPLICATION FOR LATEST UPDATES ON YOUR MOBILE PHONE
    Kashmir News is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel(@thekashmirnews) and stay updated with the latest news on Telegram
    CLICK ON THE BELOW PROVIDED LINKS TO FOLLOW KASHMIR NEWS ON: 

    OUR APPLICATION IS ALSO LIVE ON GOOGLE PLAY STORE


    Post Views: 875

    [ad_2]
    #Big #Update #Property #Tax #Manoj #Sinha #Kashmir #News

    ( With inputs from : kashmirnews.in )

  • Genuine Suggestions On Property Tax To Be Heard: LG Sinha

    Genuine Suggestions On Property Tax To Be Heard: LG Sinha

    [ad_1]

    SRINAGAR: Jammu & Kashmir’s Lieutenant Governor Manoj Sinha on Wednesday said that genuine suggestions of the public on imposition of property tax in Jammu & Kashmir would be considered.

    During a news conference in Jammu, LG Sinha mentioned that suggestions submitted by the public will be evaluated, and those that are verified to be genuine will be taken into consideration.

    The LG also stated that Jammu & Kashmir is the last state/UT to impose property tax, and the rates applied in this UT are significantly lower compared to the rates implemented in neighbouring cities such as Shimla, Chandigarh and Dehradun. He added that 40% of urban residents in J&K are exempt from paying property taxes.

    “There are 520000 houses in urban areas of Jammu & Kashmir. Out of them, 206000 are exempted from property tax,” he said.

    He said that 203600 houses would have to pay maximum Rs 1000 per annum as property tax in certain areas of Srinagar and Jammu. “If we look at other towns, they will have to pay Rs 600, Rs 500 per year,” he said.

    It is worthwhile to mention that the J & K administration has sought feedback from the general public over imposition of property tax in the Union Territory. (KNO)

    [ad_2]
    #Genuine #Suggestions #Property #Tax #Heard #Sinha

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Property tax in J&k; Genuine suggestions would be considered: LG Manoj Sinha

    Property tax in J&k; Genuine suggestions would be considered: LG Manoj Sinha

    [ad_1]

    Srinagar, Mar 29: Jammu & Kashmir’s Lieutenant Governor Manoj Sinha on Wednesday said that genuine suggestions of the public on imposition of property tax in Jammu & Kashmir would be considered.

    Addressing a news conference in Jammu, as per news agency—Kashmir News Observer (KNO), Sinha said that suggestions submitted by the people would be analysed and those found genuine would be considered.

    The LG said that Jammu & Kashmir was the last state/UT to impose property tax and the rates in the UT are much lower than the rates applicable in cities of neighbouring States. “If we compare the rates with Shimla, Chandigarh and Dehradun, these are less than 1/10th of the rates applicable in these cities,” he said, adding that 40 percent people living in urban areas of J&K are exempted from paying property taxes.

    “There are 520000 houses in urban areas of Jammu & Kashmir. Out of them, 206000 are exempted from property tax,” he said.

    He said that 203600 houses would have to pay a maximum Rs 1000 per annum as property tax in certain areas of Srinagar and Jammu. “If we look at other towns, they will have to pay Rs 600, Rs 500 per year,” he said.

    It is worthwhile to mention that the J & K administration has sought feedback from the general public over imposition of property tax in the Union Territory—(KNO)

    [ad_2]
    #Property #tax #Genuine #suggestions #considered #Manoj #Sinha

    ( With inputs from : roshankashmir.net )

  • Hyderabad: Khairatabad pays most property tax, Charminar least

    Hyderabad: Khairatabad pays most property tax, Charminar least

    [ad_1]

    Hyderabad: The Khairatabad zone in the city pays the most property tax, while the Charminar zone pays the lowest, an RTI response revealed.

    Kukatpally, Secunderabad, Serlingampally, and LB Nagar zones also figured in the top paying zones.

    Property tax receipts have increased significantly in comparison to prior years, particularly during the pandemic era, which witnessed a two-year closure.

    The Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation (GHMC) collects property tax in order to support city infrastructure projects such as parks, roads, and commercial buildings.

    Property tax revenues were Rs.1295 crore in 2018-19 and Rs.1362 crore in 2019-20, respectively. In 2020-21 and 2021-22, the receipts were Rs.1730 crore and Rs.1493 crore, respectively.

    The GHMC levies a property tax on both residential and commercial properties, with the revenues going toward the upkeep of the city’s roads, sidewalks, parks, and other infrastructure.

    Kareem Ansari, an RTI activist and a project manager at Yourti.in put out the chart of GHMC zones and the amount of tax being collected individually from them.

    [ad_2]
    #Hyderabad #Khairatabad #pays #property #tax #Charminar

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )