Chile’s Kast Unveils Slew of Reforms Including Corporate Tax Rate Cut

SANTIAGO, April 15 (Reuters) – Chile’s new president, ⁠Jose ⁠Antonio Kast, unveiled on Wednesday details ⁠of a long-awaited reform package that includes cuts to the corporate ​tax rate, as his government seeks to revive growth and promote job stability.

Some 40 measures were outlined ‌in the package, with Kast saying ‌that it had five main aims: to make Chile more tax competitive, strengthen formal ⁠employment, streamline regulations, ⁠provide more legal and regulatory certainty and exercise restraint in public ​spending.

“This bill is not an ideological agenda. It is a concrete response to … real emergencies,” Kast said in his first address to the nation since taking office last month, urging members of Congress to pass ​the measures quickly.

The right-wing leader has painted Chile, the world’s largest copper producer, as a ⁠country ⁠riddled with organized crime and ⁠weak finances.

His ​government has said it wants to lift Chile’s economic annual growth to around 4% from ​last year’s 2.5%, though analysts ⁠have expressed skepticism about whether the goal is realistic.

Kast also lacks a congressional majority, which could hamper his ability to deliver his agenda. Allied right-wing blocs hold just 76 of 155 lower-house seats and 25 of 50 Senate seats.

The centerpiece of the bill is proposed gradual cuts ⁠in the corporate tax rate to 23% from 27%, which his government has previously ⁠said would be over four years. Some opposition members have, however, argued that the real impact of a corporate tax cut remains unclear.

Other tax measures include the creation of a tax credit for wage payments, designed to encourage many smaller companies to pay employees on the books instead of under the table.

“This injects $1.4 billion annually into the productive sector, benefits 235,000 SMEs (representing 86% of the credit’s recipients), and protects more than 4 million workers. Formal employment will no longer be a penalty but an ⁠advantage,” he said.

Other reforms include steps to speed up the issuing of environmental permits for projects such as mines, a temporary VAT exemption on sales of new homes, 400 billion pesos ($450 million) in funds for fire-hit regions and an exemption for ​homeowners over 65 from property taxes on their primary residence.

($1 = 884.0000 Chilean pesos)

(Reporting by Fabian Cambero; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)

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