Saturday, October 11, 2014

Cgia: municipal taxes higher? In Rome, Bologna, Genoa and Bari – the Newspaper

Bologna, Rome, Bari and Genoa. These are the four Italian cities who hold the record low of centers in which the taxation at the municipal level is higher. To detect was the CGIA Mestre, sifting through the data, calculated the average levy that families will have to face for the payment of Tari (waste), the Tasi (services indivisible) and Ipef.

Bologna is the capital that drives the nice little chart, with 1,610 euro withdrawal, considering the homes of civilian A2. The following, at close range, Genoa (1,488 euro), Bari (1,414 euro) and Milan (1,379 euro). If you talk instead of type houses A3, the Capital jumps in head (1,100 euro), followed by Bari (€ 1,079), Naples (1,000 euro) and Genoa (961 euro).

heavy cuts to transfers, says the secretary of the CGIA, Giuseppe Bortolussi, led to a sharp increase in municipal taxation. The scissor kick, between 2010 and 2014, reached 48% in Bologna, Rome and Bari, 63% and 66% in Milan to Venice. “The municipalities have been forced to reduce services and increase local taxes, especially penalizing low-income families.”

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