The government cut subsidies for the wealthy

The government cut subsidies for the wealthy
  • 2016-06-08
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Activist with a history of the mining and quarrying industry: Subsidizing all segments of society was a very inaccurate and inaccurate job from the beginning. Subsidies had to be paid to the poor and low-income groups from the outset, not to everyone in the community.

According to Iran's International Stone Exhibition, Hossein Mahmoudi, an activist with experience in the stone and mining industry, told Iran Stone News: For the industry to recover from the recession, it is necessary for the government to take basic and fundamental measures.

He added: "Subscribing to all segments of society was a very inappropriate and inappropriate task from the beginning." Subsidies had to be paid to the poor and low-income groups from the outset, not to everyone in the community.

Mahmoudi continued: "This practice has faced major problems in financing the government and has forced the government to put more pressure on production units to offset their budget deficits by taxing them more."

He said: To make a fundamental change in the field of industry, mining and commerce in Iran it is necessary to cut off the subsidies of the rich and only subsidize those who really need it.

Activists with a history of the stone and mining industry noted: Stone industry activists and those working in the mine must both pay state salaries both performance and value added tax. Getting all this tax from the manufacturer is really a question. Government executives who are so incompatible with the tax code and are obliged to pay it, think what's going on in the mine?

He added: "Only some miners in the country have the first-class stone in their mines and can afford to pay such costs, but others in the second-and third-grade mines are incapable of paying such taxes."

Mahmoudi continued: With the advent of technology and the pervasive use of the Internet, we hoped to reduce the bulk of office traffic and we would not have to go to various offices to do our smallest work, but we would still have to do business. Reducing office paperwork is one of the issues that really needs to be put on the government's agenda.