high incomes, flat tax, superdividends… MPs boost revenue

high incomes, flat tax, superdividends… MPs boost revenue
high incomes, flat tax, superdividends… MPs boost revenue

Lhe deputies took advantage of their first day of examination of the 2025 budget to rework the government’s copy in committee by extending the contribution of high-income households and increasing the rate of the flat tax on capital income.

The Finance Commissioners opened the debates on this text with which the Barnier government is already gambling its future, and already the parliamentarians were keen to put their stamp on one of the flagship measures, a “net avoiding optimization fiscal”, according to the expression of the Ministry of the Budget.

ALSO READ Nicolas Baverez: “It only depends on us to put back on its feet and make it a power again” Expected to bring in 2 billion euros in 2025, the provision contained in the 2025 finance bill (PLF) amounts to establishing a minimum tax rate of 20%, for three years. But the commission removed any time limit. All votes in committee will, however, have to be repeated in the hemicycle, where the deputies will start from the initial version of the bill.

Limit tax optimization

In detail, the government is proposing that the wealthiest households, whose tax income exceeds 250,000 euros for singles, widowers, divorced people and 500,000 euros for couples, pay more than the exceptional contribution on high incomes already in place. . 62,500 households theoretically fell within the scope, but a preliminary study published on the website of the Ministry of the Budget estimates that 24,300 households would actually be liable.

ALSO READ Budget 2025: the big fair for new taxesBut opposition deputies, led by the general budget rapporteur Charles de Courson (Liot group), cautiously welcomed the article and its system, considered too complex. At Courson’s initiative, they adopted a rewrite intended, according to him, to limit taxpayers’ recourse to tax advantages or tax credits in order to reduce the bill. “There are fewer possibilities for tax optimization in my amendment than in the government text,” he summarized, without convincing at this stage the members of the government coalition, worried about the side effects of his rewriting. “It would not be serious to make a decision blindly,” said Éric Woerth (Ensemble pour la République, former Renaissance group).

Debates in the hemicycle next Monday

The measure aims to supplement the substantial savings that the government hopes to make: 60 billion euros, including 20 billion in new revenue. The difficult equation will be on the committee’s agenda until Saturday, before the debates in the hemicycle on Monday.

After a long discussion on Wednesday, the deputies also chose to increase the rate of the single flat-rate levy (PFU) from 30 to 33% to “rebalance the participation of capital income in relation to labor income, which contributes more to the budget of the State”, according to the author of the amendment, Jean-Paul Matteï (MoDem). Nicknamed “flat tax”, the PFU was introduced in 2018 after the abolition of the ISF, with the objective of pushing the wealthiest taxpayers to invest in the economy. And, in the process, the deputies resurrected and approved the idea of ​​a tax on superdividends.

ALSO READ “This 2025 budget puts an end to ten years of supply-side policy” MEPs also adopted several amendments on real estate, including one from the PS group to try to prevent the avoidance of a capital gains tax. Another, from Matteï, provides for an overhaul of the taxation of real estate capital gains in 2026 and 2027, with removals of criteria for the duration of holding a property to benefit from reductions in order to no longer encourage people to keep it out of the market for a long time in order to avoid a tax.

Information mission on public accounts

Several measures to combat tax evasion were also adopted in committee, but they will, again, have to be voted on in the hemicycle, then survive the shuttle with the Senate and the probable 49.3.

The debates are tinged with distrust over the causes of the slippage in the deficit, which could reach 6.1% of GDP. The Assembly’s Finance Committee officially requested on Wednesday to obtain the powers of a commission of inquiry to look into this subject, when its Senate counterpart relaunched an information mission on the deterioration of public accounts.

The commission will resume its work Thursday morning, with a heated debate on the horizon on increases in electricity prices, opposed even among government supporters.

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