Mexico City
— Mexico's lower house has approved a disputed fiscal reform plan that includes
taxes on sugary drinks, junk food and pet treats to boost government revenue in
Latin America's second economy.
President
Enrique Pena Nieto has pushed the legislation, which would also raise taxes on
higher earners, to improve the country's lackluster tax collection, one of the
lowest in the region.
But soft
drink firms and other businesses have criticized the proposed taxes as bad for
the economy, taking out advertisements in newspapers to oppose the legislation.
The chamber
of deputies approved the general outline of the bill 317-164 late Thursday and
voted on the details early Friday. It now goes to the Senate.
The reform
was backed by Pena Nieto's Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) and the
leftist Democratic Revolution Party (PRD). The conservative National Action
Party (PAN) opposed it.
The
legislation includes levies aimed at reducing obesity in Mexico, which rivals
the United States for the dubious title of world's fattest nation, with 71
percent of the population overweight.
Pena Nieto
wants Mexicans to pay an extra peso (almost eight US cents) for every liter of
sweetened drink in a country that guzzles more sodas than any other.
Soft drink
makers have dubbed the levy the "Bloomberg tax," naming it after New
York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, whose plan to ban giant soft drinks from
restaurants in his city was rejected by an appeals court in July.
The
lawmakers also passed a tax on high-calorie junk food that was not in Pena
Nieto's reform plan.
It would impose
a five percent sales tax on foods with at least 275 kilocalories per 100 grams,
including snacks, sweets, chocolate, flan, peanut butter and ice cream.
The
legislation will also increase the sales tax in border cities from 11 percent
to 16 percent, on par with the rest of the country, raising concerns among
businesses dependent on economic ties with the neighboring United States.
The sales
tax would apply to processed foods for dogs, cats and other pets as well as
chewing gum.
The reform
would also increase income taxes, with a top rate of 35 percent for those who
earn more than $234,000 a year.
Taxes in
Mexico are equivalent to 13.7 percent of the gross domestic product, compared
to an average 18.4 percent in the rest of Latin America, according to the
government.

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.