Anzeige
Mehr »
Login
Dienstag, 30.04.2024 Börsentäglich über 12.000 News von 686 internationalen Medien
Uran Boom: Die Bullen starten durch - spektakuläre Kursgewinne möglich
Anzeige

Indizes

Kurs

%
News
24 h / 7 T
Aufrufe
7 Tage

Aktien

Kurs

%
News
24 h / 7 T
Aufrufe
7 Tage

Xetra-Orderbuch

Fonds

Kurs

%

Devisen

Kurs

%

Rohstoffe

Kurs

%

Themen

Kurs

%

Erweiterte Suche
PR Newswire
146 Leser
Artikel bewerten:
(0)

April Revenues Increase $196 Million, Or 20%, Year-Over-Year

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico, May 9, 2014 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Treasury Secretary Melba Acosta Febo reported that preliminary revenues for April 2014 totaled $1,181 million, exceeding April 2013 revenues by $196 million, or 20%. In April, the month when tax returns are filed, all the principal tax revenue sources reflected increases when compared to last year.

Year-to-date General Fund revenues for fiscal 2014 totaled $7,261 million, up $465 million, or 6.8%, from the previous year.

Acosta Febo explained, "The increase this year is due to the revenue measures enacted as part of last year's budget to reduce the fiscal deficit, specifically the gross receipts tax (patente nacional), and the excise tax rate increase on foreign corporations.

"While April 2014 revenues exceeded the prior year period, the amount collected was $442 million below estimates, with $380 million of that amount corresponding to the corporate income taxes line revenue. Year-to-date (July-April) revenues are below budget estimates by $356 million," Acosta Febo stated.

The Secretary noted that the corporate tax revenues are still being analyzed, and preliminarily attributed the fluctuation to a combination of factors that were identified after the tax return filing due date, April 15, 2014.

"We are looking closely at the corporations that requested extensions. We are analyzing the thousands of applications for time extensions that were not accompanied by payments (53% of all corporations), corporations that did not make estimated payments, and payments by corporations that were below expectations. The time extension for corporations is three months in duration and ends July 15, 2014. We will closely monitor this behavior until the extended deadline," Acosta Febo emphasized.

Acosta Febo noted out that the Treasury Department is conducting an in-depth evaluation in order to take appropriate action. Treasury Department Personnel is carefully examining the information of the taxpayers in question and contacting those who, according to the agency's records, should have filed their applications for time extensions with a payment, and did not, or paid less than they were required to pay.

Corporate taxpayers that filed applications for time extensions without a payment or with an insufficient payment could be subject to a surcharge of up to 10%, plus interest at a 10% annual rate.

Other factors that may have influenced the behavior of corporate taxes include: credits and other residual items from previous years that were higher than those taken into consideration in this year's projections and reduced the tax payments, purchase of tax credits above projections, a timing difference in filing of tax returns by corporations as some close their books on dates other than December 31 (e.g., corporations that close their books on January 31 file their tax returns on May 15).

In addition, Acosta Febo stated that at $105.6 million, Sales and Use Tax collections reached the highest historic level for the month of April and for any other month except December and January. Moreover, the year-over-year increase in April, at 13.2%, was the highest for any month since the SUT was implemented. "We believe this behavior is due to the combined result of several fiscal oversight strategies aimed at reducing tax evasion and enhancing the capture rate of the Sales and Use Tax," she noted.

The Officer stated that she informed the Legislative Assembly this week, during the public budget hearings, that the Treasury Department continues to observe the behavior of revenues in the present fiscal year-while the FY 2015 budget is being considered-and its effect on estimates in order to keep the Legislature informed of any changes. While preparing the revenue estimates for the FY 2015 budget, the FY 2014 revenue base was already reduced by $537 million. The Treasury Department is analyzing April revenues to determine whether they could impact FY 2015 estimates.

"The Treasury Department will continue working on a fair tax reform that simplifies tax processes and promotes economic development, and will continue strengthening oversight efforts to increase the capture rate and fight against tax evasion to attain the financial goals we have set. Puerto Rico faces difficult and extraordinary times that demand that we all fulfill our responsibilities and contribute towards the reconstruction of our Island," Acosta Febo concluded.

General Fund Net Revenues


April


(million of $)










Abril

2012-13

Abril

2013-14

Dif.

Estimate

Abril

Collections

vs. Estimate


Items









Gross General Fund Net Revenues

1,033.7

1,229.9

196.2

1,672.2

(442.3)


Reserve for Refund

(49.0)

(49.0)

-

(49.0)

0.0


General Fund Net Revenues

984.7

1,180.9

196.2

1,623.2

(442.3)









Individual

304.1

332.4

28.3

360.7

(28.3)


Corporations

293.4

396.0

102.6

776.2

(380.2)


Non-Resident Withholdings

40.9

42.7

1.8

60.0

(17.3)


Sales and Use Tax

93.0

105.3

12.3

109.0

(3.7)


Property Taxes

0.9

2.1

1.2

1.0

1.1


Foreign (Act. 154)

127.0

169.0

42.0

184.7

(15.7)


Alcoholic Beverages

21.2

19.7

(1.5)

20.6

(0.9)


Cigarettes

15.5

19.8

4.3

15.6

4.2


Motor Vehicles

36.6

32.3

(4.3)

37.6

(5.3)


Excises on Off-Shore Shipment Rum

13.5

15.5

2.0

8.1

7.4


Others

38.6

46.0

7.4

49.7

(3.7)
















General Fund Net Revenues


July - April FY 2013-14


(million of $)










July-April Collections

2012-13

July-April Collections

2013-14

Dif.

Estimate

Jul-Abr

Collections

vs. Estimate


Items









Gross General Fund Net Revenues

7,285.8

7,751.2

465.4

8,107.1

(355.9)


Reserve for Refund

(490.0)

(490.0)

0.0

(490.0)

0.0


General Fund Net Revenues

6,795.8

7,261.2

465.4

7,617.1

(355.9)









Individual

1,692.5

1,683.5

(9.0)

1,695.5

(12.0)


Corporations

945.1

1,515.8

570.7

1,942.5

(426.7)


Non-Resident Withholdings

834.3

793.7

(40.6)

695.8

97.9


Sales and Use Tax

351.6

376.8

25.2

387.7

(11.0)


Property Taxes

10.1

16.4

6.3

14.0

2.4


Foreign (Act. 154)

1,414.9

1,526.7

111.8

1,556.5

(29.8)


Alcoholic Beverages

227.3

225.8

(1.5)

227.4

(1.6)


Cigarettes

150.1

144.1

(6.0)

142.2

1.9


Motor Vehicles

341.2

333.9

(7.3)

353.6

(19.7)


Excises on Off-Shore Shipment Rum

216.0

222.4

6.4

200.4

22.0


Others

612.7

422.0

(190.7)

401.5

20.5
























SOURCE Puerto Rico Department of the Treasury

Kupfer - Jetzt! So gelingt der Einstieg in den Rohstoff-Trend!
In diesem kostenfreien Report schaut sich Carsten Stork den Kupfer-Trend im Detail an und gibt konkrete Produkte zum Einstieg an die Hand.
Hier klicken
© 2014 PR Newswire
Werbehinweise: Die Billigung des Basisprospekts durch die BaFin ist nicht als ihre Befürwortung der angebotenen Wertpapiere zu verstehen. Wir empfehlen Interessenten und potenziellen Anlegern den Basisprospekt und die Endgültigen Bedingungen zu lesen, bevor sie eine Anlageentscheidung treffen, um sich möglichst umfassend zu informieren, insbesondere über die potenziellen Risiken und Chancen des Wertpapiers. Sie sind im Begriff, ein Produkt zu erwerben, das nicht einfach ist und schwer zu verstehen sein kann.