A new Tax Code that aims to improve the investment climate, attract more investors and additional capital to Georgia has come into force.
From now on Georgia will enjoy the benefits of a more simplified and liberal Tax Code, announced Georgia’s Ministry of Finance.
Parliament of Georgia approved amendments to the Tax Code at its third reading on May 13 with 85 votes in favour and none against, and the law came into force yesterday.
The majority of changes are now in place while one part of the Tax Code Law which modifies Georgia’s income tax rules, will come into play in January 2017.
Georgia’s economic team created the amendments to align the country’s tax system with the Corporate Income Tax (CIT) – the Estonian Taxation Model. Under the Estonian Taxation Model all businesses, except profit-sharing businesses, should be exempt from income tax.
More specifically, if a company reinvests their profit they will no longer be obliged to pay income tax. In other words if a private entity does not receive a dividend from his/her company, he/she will not pay income tax meaning he/she will not pay tax for the reinvested money.
A dividend is a sum of money typically paid annually by a company to its shareholders out of its profits.
However, Georgia’s tax rules will not change for companies or individual entrepreneurs who are prohibited from profit-sharing. This includes individual entrepreneurs, insurance and micro financing organisations, banks, public legal entities and non-profit organisations.
Georgia’s Finance Ministry announced the new Tax Code would bring the following positive results to the country:
Furthermore the Ministry said the amendments to the Tax Code will cause the following changes:
The Government of Georgia started working to simplify the country’s Tax Code after Georgia signed its Association Agreement (AA) deal with the European Union (EU) in mid-2014.
Since then Georgia’s economic team has worked to improve the country’s investment climate, attract more investors and additional capital to the country. In this process the Government invited the business associations and organisations to use their opinions in decision-making processes. Non-governmental institutions were also actively involved in modifying the country’s tax rules.
Georgia’s partner donor organisations, especially experts from the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), Governing for Growth (G4G) and officials from Estonia, were instrumental in improving Georgia’s Tax Code.