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Laos and Vietnam signed an improved free trade agreement (FTA) on March 3, 2015, to replace their existing treaty dating back to 1998.

Once in effect, the treaty will eliminate tariffs on more than 95 percent of goods, with 9,000 products to benefit from zero tariffs.

Signed by the Vietnamese Minister of Industry and Trade, Vu Huy Hoang, and his Lao counterpart, Khemmani Pholsena, the FTA will officially take effect once the two countries have completed their domestic ratification procedures and exchanged notes.

The value of bilateral trade between Vietnam and Laos is thought to have totaled USD1.4bn in 2014, with trade flows of USD2bn targeted for this year.

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Barbados and Cyprus have announced that they are to begin negotiating a double taxation agreement (DTA) to strengthen economic relations between the two territories.

Barbados Prime Minister Freundel Stuart noted that although diplomatic relations between the two countries were established in 1972, economic opportunities have yet to be fully explored. He identified financial services and tourism as common areas in which Barbados and Cyprus could learn from one another.

Last month Barbados called on the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) to work together to increase awareness of the important global economic contribution of small Caribbean international financial centers (IFCs). Representatives from the territory had reported that Barbados had struggled to enter into tax deals with other territories due to misconceptions surrounding Caribbean IFCs.

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South Africa’s Ministry of Finance has launched a public consultation on proposals for a temporary reduction in employers’ and employees’ contributions to the Unemployment Insurance Fund (UIF), while benefits will remain unchanged.

The 2015 Budget contained a proposal to reduce the remuneration threshold against which unemployment contributions are calculated from the current monthly amount of ZAR14,872 (USD1,260) to ZAR1,000.

Given the challenging economic environment that has led to downward revisions in economic growth, it is considered that a reduction in unemployment insurance contributions will provide significant support to households and employers.

If implemented, both employers and employees will be required to pay a maximum of ZAR10 each per month, down from the current maximum of ZAR148.72. The reduction is proposed to take effect on April 1, 2015, and would be reconsidered for the next fiscal year, shortly before April 1, 2016.

The measure will provide about ZAR15bn in relief to employees and employers. The contributions reduction would draw down on the UIF’s accumulated surplus, which currently stands at more than ZAR72bn, and is therefore expected to boost the economy without requiring the Government to issue additional debt.

The Ministry has invited public comments to be submitted by March 20, 2015.

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The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) has urged Spain to introduce higher green taxes to fund measures to boost economic growth.

“Spain has visibly improved its environmental performance since the turn of the century,” OECD Secretary-General Angel Gurría said. “Spain must now ensure that its economic recovery does not undo that work. There is scope to both strengthen and simplify environmental policies to achieve growth that is robust, inclusive, and green.”

According to the OECD’s new Environmental Performance Review of Spain, the country has not fully used the potential of environmental taxation to achieve environmental objectives and to help reduce public debt.

The report welcomed a proposal to increase the taxation of diesel as a way to tackle pollution in the transport sector. It said that taxes on other fuel use, such as for heating, should also be examined.

In addition, taxation of energy products should be revised to ensure that the tax burden on natural gas and coal reflects their respective contributions to carbon dioxide and air pollutant emissions, the OECD said.

The report also urged Spain to rein in exemptions and deductions relating to transport fuel taxes.

The OECD said that energy tax reform could raise the Spanish Government’s revenues by between EUR7.2bn (USD7.94bn) and EUR9bn in 2018, while having a lesser impact on growth rates than other revenue-raising measures.

Spain’s green tax revenue has fallen to among the lowest in Europe, at 1.6 percent of GDP in 2012, the report said.

The country is considering a number of reforms to its environmental taxes, including a reform of vehicle taxes and the introduction of a nationwide waste tax.

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Economic growth in Canada and Switzerland beat expectations, but currency issues are causing analysts to urge caution for the future.

In the fourth quarter of 2014, Canada saw GDP rise by 2.4% annualized, according to a statement by Statistics Canada issued on Tuesday. The growth was above expectations although slightly lower than third quarter growth, which rose by 3.2%, according to a revised estimate. Economists had expected 2% economic growth.

To urge continued economic growth, the Bank of Canada cut its interest rate target to 0.75% in January, as a stronger U.S. Dollar and falling oil prices are headwinds to Canadian growth.

The fall in oil hurt exports, which indicated a contraction from previous periods. Goods exports fell 2.5% annualized, with imports and domestic demand making up for the decline. Crude oil and bitumen products saw a 6.5% fall, with cheaper prices and slow growth in demand causing a shortfall. However, refined petroleum products where the hardest hit, falling 36.3% on an annualized basis due to lower prices.

Canadian firms are turning towards domestic demand to fill the gap in exports, as indicated by higher inventories in the fourth quarter. In total, business inventories rose 7.4 billion CAD, or $5.9 billion, in the period as businesses geared up for greater spending in the domestic economy.

In total, Canada saw 2.5% growth in 2014.

Swiss Growth Surprises

Swiss economic growth was double expectations, despite the Swiss abandoning the franc peg to the euro at the end of the year.

In total, GDP rose 0.6% in the last three months of 2014, according to the State Secretariat for Economic Affairs. The SSEA also upgraded their estimate for third quarter GDP growth, up to 0.7%.

Many economists expect Switzerland’s growth to slow as their appreciating currency hampers the export-driven economy. The abandoned peg occurred in the middle of January so it had no impact on growth in 2014.  Many economists are dismissing the Swiss economic data as irrelevant in the new post-peg world.

The Swiss National Bank abandoned the peg because of the expense of maintaining in and the belief that devaluing its currency could cause a “deep recession.”  Exporters have a wildly different view, arguing that peg abandonment would directly hurt earnings due to the stronger franc.  Companies such as Swatch Group have warned investors—and seen their stock prices fall at the same time.

Economists at investment banks in Switzerland have released a number of reports after the announcement of the GDP figure, arguing that this performance is unlikely to maintain its momentum after the policy change. However, some economists are also predicting that there will be no recession for Switzerland, and that it will see a pick-up in both activity and performance by the end of the year. The catalyst for this change in momentum, however, remains unclear.

The Swiss National Bank is expecting 2015 growth around 2%, although some economists have warned that weaker exports will pressure that growth rate. For 2014, exports rose 4.1%.

One economist at Credit Suisse warned that Swiss industry is likely to stagnate, and domestic demand for goods and services will weaken with the stronger currency.

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On March 2, Monaco and Italy signed a tax information exchange agreement (TIEA) based on the latest model agreement from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) and the treaties Italy has recently concluded with Switzerland and Liechtenstein.

Signed by Italy’s Ambassador to Monaco, Antonio Morabito, and Monaco’s Minister for Foreign Affairs and Cooperation, Gilles Tonelli, the TIEA and an accompanying protocol will be effective after the completion of domestic ratification procedures by both territories. It will cover accounts that are open on the date the agreement was signed.

The TIEA provides for the automatic exchange of tax information on request, and an accompanying protocol also allows group requests providing there is evidence that tax is at risk.

Following the signing of the TIEA, it has been agreed that Monaco has adequate information exchange arrangements in place with Italy to be taken off the Italian “black list.” As a result, Italians with undeclared assets in Monaco will now be allowed to enter into Italy’s current voluntary disclosure program, which allows Italian residents to regularize undeclared capital held abroad and access penalty concessions.

Those wishing to be included in the program must file an application by September 30, 2015. Participants have to pay all outstanding taxes. However, the taxpayer will be subject to much-reduced administrative and criminal penalties and will generally be free from criminal prosecution.

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With Egypt’s economic conference barely a week away, anticipation about the opportunities it will unveil is high in the country as well as among foreign business communities.

Those familiar with Egypt know that the scope for investing there is immense because expansions and improvements are needed in every economic sector.

That is why the outcome of the conference on March 13 to 15, will be pivotal for the economy’s growth and stability over the next five to six years – a critical recovery phase long overdue after the dramatic deterioration experienced since 2011.

The conclusions reached will have a wide-ranging resonance and, therefore, implications for international peace and security in the broader region.

Anchoring economic stability in the country of 84 million people, with almost 30 per cent youth unemployment and high international market exposure, is imperative for Egypt to address its economic, social and security challenges.

This in turn would enable it to maintain its much-needed constructive role in the acutely volatile geopolitical environment casting a shadow over the Middle East.

The dust from the 2011 revolutionary storm in Egypt and its destabilising aftermath has not yet settled completely. The turbulent events coincided with the hard-hitting repercussions of the global financial crash and economic recession that caused a worldwide slump in foreign direct investment (FDI).

With the recent softening of hydrocarbon prices, the onus is shifting, perhaps sooner than expected, more towards an internally-driven economic recovery than one leveraged by external transfers. That may well be a blessing in disguise.

Steady improvements have already been observed in Egypt’s economic prospects with a robust reform agenda being pursued by the government. This increasingly positive outlook has been confirmed in recently released assessments by Moody’s and the IMF.

Indeed, behind the dust veil that has clouded its economic future for three years, Egypt remains promising for investment. Since the president Abdel Fattah El Sisi’s debut at the 2014 UN General Assembly and his announcement of rigorous economic and investment plans and reforms, large business missions from Russia, Britain, the US, Italy and the GCC have visited Egypt for early-bird explorations of what the new political environment may offer.

Not long ago, in 2010, Egypt had come to be regarded as “a rising star” as it joined for the first time the ranks of the top 25 emerging market destinations for FDI, according to AT Kearney’s FDI Confidence Index. During 2004 to 2010, annual economic growth had averaged 5.5 per cent, although this did not translate proportionately into enough jobs for the fast-growing workforce.

Egypt has been off Kearney’s top 25 emerging countries list since 2010. After economic growth had collapsed to less than 1 per cent in 2011, it recovered to only about 2 per cent through 2014. New FDI flows to Egypt were slashed by half, from about $8 billion, between 2008 and 2014.

Nevertheless, several factors that had turned Egypt into an up-and-coming capital destination still exist, such as its hydrocarbon resources, large consumer market, and diligent business environment reforms that even the World Bank commended in its Doing Business report.

Additional legislative business sector reforms are now due for presidential ratification. And despite the revamped minimum wage bill, labour costs are still among the lowest in the region thanks to the current oversupply of job seekers. Recent steps the central bank took to allow further depreciation of the Egyptian currency support efforts to boost trade competitiveness, improving investment incentives.

Egypt is a member of the Greater Arab Free Trade Area and the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa, and is on its way to a free trade agreement with Russia.

The government’s plan to capitalise extensively on Egypt’s strategic location through a multi-sector development programme for the Suez Canal Zone is designed to serve as a major catalyst for attracting FDI to fuel a sustained economic expansion.

Ambitious overall annual targets have been set for the next five years: raising economic growth to 6 per cent; reducing inflation to 7 per cent; shrinking the fiscal deficit and external debt to 8 per cent and 80 to 85 per cent of GDP, respectively.

The government has prepared plans for projects ranging from mega-ventures to microfinance schemes for which studies have been conducted. Their implementation would provide stimulus for investment in the production of supporting goods and services, and in vertical integration projects.

Infrastructural developments are among the government’s top priorities, including in the energy and transportation sectors that are cornerstones for raising productivity and augmenting the capital resource base. They are also major contributors to employment.

The FDI influx that the Egyptian government is striving to attract with its macroeconomic stabilisation policies and investment menu that an expansion in employment, GDP and income no doubt require, also holds risks that could jeopardise the recovery. Most critical is the risk of summoning another phase of non-inclusive economic growth that leaves millions behind.

A repeat of the 1990s’ saga whose consequences came in to full view in 2007-08 would be traumatic this time around.

Today financial and economic coping thresholds, on the individual as well as state levels, are much lower. External factors added to the mix of internal stressors have increased Egypt’s vulnerability to significant regional and international shocks.

Narrow concentration of investment expansion in a few sectors would also sabotage the goals of lower inflation and inclusive economic growth.

Such diversions would have counterproductive consequences for Egypt’s external sector and standing in international finance, whose health is important not only for investor confidence but also for long- term stability.

Regardless of policy specifics, strengthening the rule of law is now indispensable for investment efforts to succeed, broad-based development to be realised, and social justice to be widely felt.

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Price cutting and weak euro boost activity

London: Price cutting and a weaker currency helped Eurozone business activity accelerate in February, according to surveys published just before the European Central Bank embarks on a trillion-euro stimulus programme.

Survey compiler Markit said the surveys pointed to first quarter GDP growth of 0.3 percent, the same as at the tail-end of 2014, as business activity expanded in all of the bloc’s four biggest economies for the first time since last April.

That growth prediction matches the median forecast in a Reuters poll taken last month.

“The outlook has brightened for all countries. The weaker euro should help boost exports and, perhaps most importantly, the commencement of quantitative easing by the ECB should stimulate the economy as we move through the year,” said Chris Williamson, chief economist at Markit.

The euro has fallen nearly 8 percent since the start of the year against the dollar, helping drive Markit’s final February Composite Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) up to a seven-month high of 53.3.

Although weaker than a preliminary estimate of 53.5 it comfortably beat January’s 52.6 and achieved its 20th month above the 50 level that separates growth from contraction.

A PMI covering the Eurozone’s dominant service industry rose one point from January to 53.7 but was similarly lower than a flash reading of 53.9.

To encourage demand firms have been cutting prices for almost three years — the output price index again came in sub-50 at 47.9 — and the ECB has been battling to bring inflation back to its near 2 per cent target. Inflation stood at -0.3 percent in February.

As part of that battle, and to stimulate growth, the central bank plans to flood markets with cash. Service firms were optimistic about the plan as their business expectations for the coming 12 months were at their highest since May 2011. The subindex was 64.1.

Detailed PMI data are only available under licence from Markit and customers need to apply to Markit for a licence.

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City leads Mena region; alumni group picks Dubai as the most attractive place to live in

Dubai: Dubai ranked first in the Middle East and Africa region for quality of living, according to a report released on Wednesday by human resources consultancy Mercer.

The 2015 Quality of Living report, which ranks 230 cities, indicates that Dubai was ranked 74th globally, having dropped one spot from 2014, while Abu Dhabi took the 77th spot, up one place from 2014.

In another report by the Alumni Association of graduate business school Insead released November last year, Dubai was ranked the most attractive place to live in terms of professional and private life.

The report surveyed respondents of 35 different nationalities to rate 15 key cities in the world in terms of economic dynamism (quality of labour, access to funding); quality of life (sports and cultural facilities, air quality); cost of living (real estate, dining, entertainment) and overall attractiveness (young talent, access to technology). Dubai ranked first in economic dynamism, third in overall attractiveness and fourth in terms of quality of life and cost of living.

Stable

As per Mercer’s report, most of the countries in the region maintained a stable position compared with 2014, with Amman, for instance, climbing five places to 122, according to the report. However, Beirut dropped eight places to rank 181, while Cairo fell nine places to 170.

Vienna was the city with the best quality of living for the second consecutive year. It was followed by Zurich, Auckland, and Munich, having taken the second, third, and fourth place respectively.

Fifth-place was taken by Vancouver, followed by Singapore at 26.

Infrastructure has a big effect on the quality of living that expatriates experience, said Nuno Gomes, Information Solutions Middle East Leader at Mercer, in a statement.

“While often taken for granted when functioning to a high standard, a city’s infrastructure can generate severe hardship when it is deficient. Companies need to provide adequate allowances to compensate their international workers for these and other hardships,” Gomes added.

He said that multinational companies need to be aware of current events and local circumstances to ensure their expatriates are compensated appropriately and an adequate hardship allowance is included in compensation packages.

“Factors such as internal stability, law enforcement effectiveness, crime levels and medical facilities are important to consider when deciding on an international assignment, and the impact on daily life that could be encountered by the expatriate in overseas placements,” he said.

Mercer’s report considers a city’s political and social environment, medical care and health considerations, public services, recreation facilities and natural environment, among others.

Dubai is also the most popular long-haul destination from many European cities, including Frankfurt and Munich.

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Greece’s new Finance Minister, Yanis Varoufakis, has said that Greece is considering an “extraordinary tax” on wealthy individuals to expand on the new left-wing Government’s revenue streams.

The comments came during an interview with Greek television station SKAI TV on February 28. He said that the main objective would be to tax people “who have money, but have never paid.” This levy would apply above a specific income threshold, he indicated, but he did not provide additional details on the proposal. To support low income taxpayers, the Government will seek to phase back in the EUR12,000 (USD13,350) exempt threshold for the special solidarity contribution – a progressive, “crisis” levy introduced in 2011, which is levied at a rate of 1-4 percent, in addition to income tax.

He also briefly discussed the Government’s take on value-added tax (VAT) policy. He said that, as part of talks with the European Commission, the Government will be required to review certain concessionary rates to levy the headline rate on a broader range of goods and services, bringing Greece’s VAT rules closer into line with the VAT systems in other European Union member states. With reference to the Greek border regions, he said the Government is opposed to increasing VAT on medicine, food, and books.

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