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Portugal slashes corporate tax and government spending
By Mike Ingram
1 December 2003
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The Portuguese parliament has approved the governments
budget bill for 2004 that slashes corporate taxes amid growing
economic instability.
On November 21, the budget blueprint was passed with the votes
of 119 members of parliament from the ruling Social Democrats
and their coalition partners in the Popular Party. The remaining
111 MPs, made up of the Socialists, Communists, Greens and the
Left Bloc, voted against the bill.
The budget puts forward a reduction in the main corporate tax
rate from 30 percent to 25 percent, with the intention to reduce
this to 20 percent by 2006. The coalition is pushing through government
spending cuts in order to keep the countrys public deficit
within the three-percent limit imposed with the adoption of the
euro.
Prime Minister Jose Manuel Durao Barroso claims that the corporate
tax cut is needed to boost competitiveness and fight rising unemployment.
He argues that they will help the economywhich is expected
to shrink up to one percent this yearboost competitiveness
and spur job creation. The government predicts a growth in the
economy of between 0.5 percent and 1.5 percent, claiming that
a recovery in the global economy will lead to a rise in exports
of Portuguese goods.
According to a report published by O Banco de Portugal, however,
the deficit could easily be in excess of four percent of GDP this
year due to a deeper than expected recession. Portugal was the
first country to be criticised under the European Union Stability
Pact, which sets guidelines to enforce fiscal policy to keep 12
countries in line. After posting a deficit of 4.2 percent of GDP
in 2002, the government slashed investment and raised taxes to
bring the deficit down to 2.7 per cent of GDP last year.
The pledge to keep to the pacts three-percent limit for
this year while slashing corporate tax can only have a devastating
impact on social services. With the Portuguese economy hit harder
than expected, the central bank now says that an extra two percent
of GDP will be needed to bring the deficit in line with EU rules.
Part of this is expected to be raised through the privatisation
of the state postal system, but there are already significant
cuts being made in the public sectornotably in education.
Plans are under way to close 2,300 schools, mostly in rural
areas by 2007. The 2004 budget includes a 4.6 percent cut in spending
by the education ministry compared with the previous year. This
is in a country that already has the highest high school drop
out rate of the 15-member European Union and the highest level
of illiteracy. According to education ministry figures, nearly
one in two Portuguese high school students drop out before completing
their secondary education.
Employment in Europe 2003, a recent document published
by the European Commission, paints a devastating picture of the
Portuguese labour market. The country is praised for having achieved
an overall employment rate of 68 percent, close to the 70 percent
goal set forward for 2010. But the report points out that Portugal
has the highest percentage of workers with low education, not
only among the existing EU, but also the 25 countries that will
make up the enlarged European Union including many former Stalinist
regimes in Eastern Europe.
Fully 78 percent of the Portuguese population between the ages
of 15 and 64 have a low education level, more than double the
European average of 36.6 percent. Fourteen percent have a medium
level of education, while only eight percent have a high level.
Despite having a lower level of economic development than Portugal,
the candidate countries have a higher level of education with
a majority of workers classed as being of a medium level.
According to the report, Portugal also has the lowest wages
among the 15 European Union countries. The medium gross monthly
wage in Industry and Services was 950 euros for Portugal in 2000,
against 3,000 in the United Kingdom and Denmark. The report says
that presently wages and productivity stand at 62.6 percent of
the European average.
Official unemployment passed 6.2 percent in the second quarter
of 2003, according to the Institute of Statistics (INE), compared
with 4.1 percent in 2001. The number of people enrolled at Job
Centres is continuing to rise with a leap of 4.7 percent, up 19,777
for September this year. The increase was in part attributed to
a rise in the number of unemployed teachers, 17,414 at the end
of September.
As an early and enthusiastic adopter of the euro, Portugal
provides graphic illustration of the political perspective being
pursued by the representatives of the ruling elite through the
mechanisms of the EU and its consequences for working people.
The convergence policies accompanying the new currency are intended
to eliminate all obstacles to industrial mobility, allowing corporations
to invest wherever the labour and tax costs are lowest. Having
seen its position as the cheapest labour force in Europe supplanted
by the eastward expansion of the EU giving access to a more skilled,
yet cheaper labour source, the Portuguese government is seeking
to attract the representatives of big business through tax-breaks
for the rich at the expense of working people.
See Also:
EU expansion worsens Portugals
economic crisis
[20 June 2003]
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