Local November 22, 2011 - 7:43 am

3Q tax revenue falls 3.3% short of estimate, paced by auto imports

Santo Domingo.- This year’s tax revenues are falling short. To September 30 collection surpassed 8.9% compared with the same 2010 period, but 3.3% below the estimate

The fiscal performance was the result of a combination of spikes in important tax revenue sources and offices.

The Customs Agency posted a considerable increase, but Internal Taxes fell short of its projections.

Vehicle imports fell to 5,183 units in the first nine months compared with the same year ago period, according to Ministry Treasury figures. The 17% tax on new vehicles (first license plate) fell 1.6% on an 11.2% fall in the FOB value of imported vehicles. In terms of units, 41,198 vehicles were imported, compared to the 46,381 brought in the dame 2010period.

The fall in revenue expectations, which to the cut- off date was an absolute amount of RD$7.1 billion, is partly attributed to a lower yield in the income for selective taxes on fuels and the tax on specific companies, ITBIS, tobacco and taxes on services.

The Treasury Ministry’s report for the January-September cites RD$205.97 billion in revenue, or 8.9% more than the RD$189.2 billion in 2010, or RD$16.8 billion higher.

However, compared with the estimated income in the current Budget, there was a fall of 3.3%, or RD$7.1 billion less than projected.

COVID-19

September 13, 2024 - 2:27 pm

The impact of AI on diagnostic accuracy

September 13, 2024 - 9:20 am

Vice President Raquel Peña opens XIII Dominican Congress of Nephrology

September 13, 2024 - 8:07 am

Health Ministry reports no new monkeypox cases

September 9, 2024 - 10:46 am

3rd Latin American Digital Health Congress announced

MOST READ

Economy

The Hostos Project: what we know about the submarine cable connecting DR and Puerto Rico’s power systems

Bavaro & Punta Cana

Fire breaks out at Club Med Punta Cana

Local

U.S. military aircraft delivers humanitarian aid to Dominican Republic

Economy

Abinader: Haiti crisis straining Dominican Republic’s migration, health, and education systems

MORE NEWS

Tourism

Four Seasons CEO: “Dominican Republic has all the elements for luxury tourism”

Economy

Haitian authorities await Dominican Republic approval to open gateway

Economy

Director of INDRHI affirms the money Government seeks in a tax reform could be generated through responsible mining

Economy

Dominican Republic is among the best in Latin America in productivity