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Tunisia to raise new taxes to close budget deficit

By AFP - Dec 27,2022 - Last updated at Dec 27,2022

TUNIS — Tunisia's finance minister unveiled a budget on Monday aiming to use new tax revenues to claw the deficit back to near 5 per cent of GDP, as the cash-strapped country awaits an international bailout.

The 2023 budget comes as the North African country grapples with eye-watering public debt, shortages of goods from sugar to petrol and inflation at nearly 10 per cent.

The latest plans aim to cut the budget deficit from 7.7 per cent of gross domestic product to 5.2 per cent, Finance Minister Sihem Boughdiri told journalists.

The state, saddled with a crippling public wage bill and politically sensitive subsidies, is set to take in around 46.4 billion dinars ($14.8 billion), Boughdiri said.

It will need to borrow some 23.5 billion dinars to cover state needs for the coming year, she added.

To find the cash, it will seek more than $4 billion from overseas as well as some $3 billion from local banks, according to the fiscal plan.

To boost revenues, the government has imposed a new tax of half a per cent on real estate assets worth over 3 million dinars ($960,000).

Cash payments of over 5,000 dinars will be taxed at 20 per cent, while taxes on some professional services such as legal services will be hiked to 19 per cent, up from 13 per cent.

The budget is based on assumptions of 1.8 per cent GDP growth, oil at $89 a barrel and a deal with the International Monetary Fund for a $1.9 billion bailout loan.

Economy Minister Samir Saied has predicted 2023 would be "a very difficult year" and that inflation would hit 10.5 per cent.

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