Premier Giorgia Meloni said her
government intends to cut taxes for the middle class further and
ruled out a wealth tax as she addressed the annual assembly of
retailers association Confcommercio in Rome on Wednesday.
"We don't intend to stop; we want to do more to reduce the tax
burden on the middle class," said Meloni, whose government cut
to the second band of the IRPEF income tax for earnings of
between 28,000 and 50,000 euros from 35% to 33% in the 2026
budget law.
"Others talk about taxing wealth, but we're working to ensure
that Italians can aspire to (have) wealth after decades of
sacrifice".
The premier also spoke about the measures the government has put
in place to clamp down on so-called 'Apri e Chiudi' (open and
close) businesses, enterprises that open, issue invoices, often
for non-existent transactions, and then quickly closing to avoid
tax audits and other payments.
"This is not a banana republic, here the rules are respected,"
she said.
"There is no market without rules".
Meloni linked the problem of Italy's declining birth rate and
ageing population to the need to offer better prospects to young
people.
"We have an emergency called the young generations, the ability
to offer greater and further opportunities to the best energies
we have, and, on the other hand, the need to reverse the
demographic emergency, one of our greatest economic problems,"
she said.
The premier also hailed the role of the nation's shopkeepers.
"Your businesses are the fabric that keeps our regions, our
villages, our cities and towns, even the smallest ones, alive,"
she said.
"Every raised shutter is a light, a reference point, a
certainty, but also a sign of energy, of know-how; it is a
guarantee of safety, of sociality, of community—it is something
that no online platform can ever replace," Meloni said.
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