Rtn calida edition 93

Page 1

FREE!

costa calida EDITION costa calida

Your English Newspaper

roundtownnews.com

Issue 93

8 - 13 AUGUST 3-9 Jan 2014

IMPORTANT NOTICE: The next edition of RTN will be out on Thursday 14th August due to a national holiday.

Pensioners lose tax break PRIME MINISTER Mariano Rajoy’s announcement that pensioners are to lose their automatic exemption to Capital Gains Tax when selling homes has sent shockwaves through the expat population. by Jack Troughton

Fancy dress is optional

Summer Lovin’ at La Rosa GREASE IS the Word on Friday 15th August at La Rosa, San Cayetano from 9pm at a fantastic Grease Sing-a-Long! Tickets at 3€ are available behind the bar and fancy dress is optional but enthusiastically encouraged! So dig out that Pink Lady outfit, bobby socks and an economy-sized jar of Brylcreem and head for the best party of the summer. All proceeds go to MABS Mar Menor Cancer Support.

As part of a package of economic and financial reforms, the Premier said the tax break for people over the age of 65 would only remain if they bought another property or invested in a bank-led ‘pension’ scheme. The government has described the change as a way of insuring the older population supplements its pension. The move – which would come into effect on 1st January 2015 and introduces an enhanced tax – has caused uproar in Spanish circles already deeply untrusting of the banking system, one pensioner describing bankers as a “bunch of thieves”. However, RTN was told the changes to ‘plusvalia’ would particularly hit expats looking to downsize, sell to rent a home and enjoy an income from the proceeds, or sell to return to their own countries. The change would also affect property owned abroad by a Spanish fiscal resident – a little understood part of the controversial declaration of assets exercise.

And because precise details of the changes to the tax system have yet to be published, confusion and speculation are rife. Charles Svoboda, a member of campaign group AUN which fights for the rights of property owners and the environment, admitted that “the devils lurk in the details.” He said: “The story is a little confused and the more you read the more confused you get. For example newspaper articles confuse primary and secondary residences – the details will not be published in the official bulletin for at least a month.” Charles said Mr Rajoy and the Finance Ministry in Madrid suggested capital gain from the sale of property must be invested in “some sort” of pension augmentation scheme – mainly available to banks and not necessarily to non-Spanish residents. “Capital Gains Tax, like the inheritance tax, is very much a ticking time bomb for current and would-be property owners. This seems to have come from the Ministry of Stupid ideas; they do not think these things through.” Continued on page 8


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.