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  • Protest Over Taxes: Small traders demand reply, threaten to go on st

    Protest Over Taxes: Small traders demand reply, threaten to go on strike

    News | 29.01.15 | 14:11


    Alina Nikoghosyan
    ArmeniaNow intern

    Hundreds of representatives of small or medium companies, including
    market traders, demanded an ultimate answer to their demands as they
    continued their protests in front of the government building on
    Thursday.

    The traders demanded that planned controversial changes in the sales
    tax law be scrapped and threatened to go on strike unless the demand
    is met.

    The law that actually envisages the reduction of the sales tax for
    small enterprises from 3.5 to 1 percent, but implies stricter rules
    for the submission of sales-related documentation to tax authorities
    originally was to have been enforced still on November 1, 2014.

    However, after a series of protests staged by small business owners,
    including hundreds of workers of Yerevan fairs, the government decided
    to postpone the application of the law until February 1, 2015.

    Small traders insist that they want to continue to work according to
    the current rules as the new law, which the government insists is
    beneficial for small businesses, adds an extra amount of paperwork.

    They also claim that the law uses small companies as a tool in the
    government's fight against tax evasions by larger companies - an
    unacceptable practice, in their view.

    Today the situation in front of the government building was tense
    again; some traders came from the provinces to join the protests in
    Yerevan. According to the protesters, if their demands are not met,
    they will demand Finance Minister Gagik Khachatryan's resignation.

    The demonstrators threatened that if the government does not respond
    to them they will stop paying taxes from February 1 and will go on
    "nationwide" strike. "If they do not listen to us with their ears,
    they will have to listen to us with their pockets," one of the
    protesters said.

    "Small and medium-sized businesses should not be pitted against large
    companies in an attempt to clamp down on tax evasion by the latter.
    Here again the small companies will suffer because the large companies
    have more power to pressure them," economist Vilen Khachatryan told
    reporters on Thursday, addressing the issue.

    According to the economist, possible compromises of the government
    will depend on the government's disposition and the magnitude of the
    protests.

    http://armenianow.com/news/60183/armenia_traders_protest_sales_tax_government

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