Proposed tax changes face resistance in Italy
Lawmakers in Italy are challenging government plans to raise cryptocurrency taxes and broaden the scope of digital levies, highlighting concerns over fairness and economic impact.
Italian lawmakers are challenging proposed tax hikes on cryptocurrency capital gains and an expansion of the country’s digital tax. The government’s plans, part of Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s 2024 budget, include raising cryptocurrency taxes from 26% to 42% and applying digital levies to smaller firms. However, coalition members are advocating for less drastic measures, calling for a reduced crypto tax of 28% and preserving revenue thresholds for the digital tax.
Italian Economy Minister Giancarlo Giorgetti has signaled openness to revising the cryptocurrency tax proposal, emphasising the need for a balanced approach. Meanwhile, Forza Italia, a co-ruling party, is pushing to keep Italy’s web tax focused on large tech companies like Meta, Google, and Amazon, arguing that expanding it to smaller businesses could harm local enterprises.
Italy introduced a 3% digital tax on major tech firms in 2019, but new proposals to eliminate revenue thresholds have sparked concerns of unfair burdens on small and medium-sized businesses. The debate reflects broader tensions over balancing revenue generation with economic fairness and international relations, particularly with the US, which has criticised the digital tax’s impact on American firms.