Quick access to main page (top) Direct access to main contents Quick access to main page (bottom)

Russia is Taxing the Wealthy Elites for their War Agenda

Daniel Kim Views  

Russia plans to raise income tax. On the 20th, the Russian Parliament preliminarily approved a bill that raised the income tax for the wealthy elites. This bill has passed the first of three readings in the State Duma, Russia’s lower parliament house, as Moscow continues to spend a vast amount of money on military operations in Ukraine. The proposal includes a progressive tax on personal income, a shift from the current flat tax introduced in 2001. If the bill passes, a 13% tax will be imposed on incomes up to 2.4 million rubles ($27,500). For incomes exceeding that amount, progressive tax rates will apply. A maximum rate of 22% will be imposed for incomes exceeding 50 million rubles ($573,000).

The 13% flat tax was introduced to prevent tax evasion and to increase national revenue. Russian President Vladimir Putin stated that the tax increase would affect not more than 3.2% of Russian taxpayers. The reform plan also calls for raising the corporate income tax rate from 20% to 25%. Russia’s Interfax news agency estimated an additional 2.6 trillion rubles ($29 billion) on top of federal budget revenue by 2025 if the bill is implemented. In 2021, Russia reformed tax rates to require individuals earning more than 5 million rubles annually to pay 15% on the exceeding amounts.

Daniel Kim
content@viewusglobal.com

Comments0

300

Comments0

[WORLD] Latest Stories

  • Porsche Taycan GTS Breaks Guinness Record with 10.9-Mile Ice Drift
  • Africa's MPOX Variant Clade 1b Reaches France: Health Officials Take Action
  • LA Wildfires’ Economic Toll Hits $50 Billion, Doubling Early Estimates
  • Real Reason Trump Wants Greenland and the Panama Canal: Geopolitical Dominance
  • Biden Targets China, Russia with New Semiconductor Export Limits
  • Wildfire Chaos in California: 150,000 Evacuated as Flames Spread

You May Also Like

  • 1
    Food Addiction in Kids Tied to Low Self-Esteem and Poor School Performance

    LIFESTYLE 

  • 2
    Baby’s Here, But the Weight’s Still There? You’re Not Alone

    LIFESTYLE 

  • 3
    Inside the Pope’s Health Crisis: Antibiotic-Resistant Infection Fuels Global Concern

    LIFESTYLE 

  • 4
    Want to Lose Weight? Trick Your Brain with These Simple Diet Hacks!

    LIFESTYLE 

  • 5
    Turns Out, What You Eat at 40 Really Can Shape How You Feel at 70

    LIFESTYLE 

Popular Now

  • 1
    FDA Greenlights Sanofi's Qfitlia for Hemophilia—An Innovative Alternative to Daily Injections

    LIFESTYLE 

  • 2
    Prostate Cancer Screenings May Cut Death Risk in Half, Study Finds

    LIFESTYLE 

  • 3
    It’s Not Just Depression: Personality Disorders Linked to Highest Suicide Risk

    LIFESTYLE 

  • 4
    Faster Cancer Treatment? Merck Launch Set for Subcutaneous Keytruda Rollout

    LIFESTYLE 

  • 5
    Cutting Carbs? You Might Be Raising Your Risk of Colon Cancer

    LIFESTYLE 

Must-Reads

  • 1
    Food Addiction in Kids Tied to Low Self-Esteem and Poor School Performance

    LIFESTYLE 

  • 2
    Baby’s Here, But the Weight’s Still There? You’re Not Alone

    LIFESTYLE 

  • 3
    Inside the Pope’s Health Crisis: Antibiotic-Resistant Infection Fuels Global Concern

    LIFESTYLE 

  • 4
    Want to Lose Weight? Trick Your Brain with These Simple Diet Hacks!

    LIFESTYLE 

  • 5
    Turns Out, What You Eat at 40 Really Can Shape How You Feel at 70

    LIFESTYLE 

Popular Now

  • 1
    FDA Greenlights Sanofi's Qfitlia for Hemophilia—An Innovative Alternative to Daily Injections

    LIFESTYLE 

  • 2
    Prostate Cancer Screenings May Cut Death Risk in Half, Study Finds

    LIFESTYLE 

  • 3
    It’s Not Just Depression: Personality Disorders Linked to Highest Suicide Risk

    LIFESTYLE 

  • 4
    Faster Cancer Treatment? Merck Launch Set for Subcutaneous Keytruda Rollout

    LIFESTYLE 

  • 5
    Cutting Carbs? You Might Be Raising Your Risk of Colon Cancer

    LIFESTYLE 

Share it on...