词条 | Taxation in Colombia | ||||||||||
释义 |
See Government of Colombia for a broader perspective of Colombian government.{{Taxation}} Taxation in Colombia is determined by the Congress of Colombia, every Department Assembly and every City Council, which determine what kind of taxes can be levied and which rates can be applied. The country inherited a harsh and diffused taxation policy from the Spanish Empire characterized by a heavy reliance on customs duties. National taxes{{anchor|IVA|Stamp tax|Financial transactions tax|Patrimony tax|Income tax}}National taxes are administered by the National Directorate of Taxes and Customs ({{lang-es|Dirección de Impuestos y Aduanas Nacionales}}, DIAN).[1] Some of these taxes include:
The value-added tax (VAT) is the main indirect tax. Apparently, this is rising to 19 percent in 2017[2]; up to the end of 2016 the tax was 16 percent of the price of merchandise, goods and services with some exceptions: public transportation, water supply and sanitation and the transportation of natural gas and hydrocarbons. The DIAN recognizes two separate categories (regimenes) of VAT: common and simplified. The first refers to businesses with estimated patrimony over 68 million Colombian pesos (about 34,000 USD), and the second refers to those with patrimony less than that. Although both are obligated to pay the same percentage, the simplified taxpayers are not obligated to conduct separate bookkeeping for the VAT or to generate invoices.
The stamp tax ({{lang-es|impuesto de timbre}}) is a tax on the expedition of an official document (or on the validity of private documents), such as a contract or contractual modification.
A 0.4% tax rate is imposed on all financial transactions, including withdraw money from ATM, promissory notes, wire transfers, internet banking, bank drafts and bank checks, money on term deposit, overdrafts, installment loans, securities underwriting commitments and other forms of off-balance sheet exposures, safekeeping of documents and other items in safe deposit boxes, currency exchange or unit trusts.
This tax requires the annual payment of 0.3% of the total patrimony of people with patrimony estimated over 3 billion pesos (about 1 million USD).
The table below shows the tax rate in units of UVT (Unidad de Valor Tributario), in which 1 UVT = $33.156 COP for 2018.[4]
Payroll taxesBoth the employer and the employee are subject to monthly payroll taxes from the employee's gross salary, as follows:[6]
Local taxes{{anchor|Local order taxes}}This group of taxes includes:
References1. ^DIAN National Tax and Customs Direction 2. ^{{Cite news|url=http://www.auxadi.com/en/tax-reform-in-colombia-2017/|title=Tax Reform in Colombia 2017|date=2017-01-25|newspaper=auxadi|language=es-ES|access-date=2017-02-01}} 3. ^Estatuto Tributario colombiano. Art. 240, Estatuto Tributario Nacional 4. ^ "DIAN - Resolución 115, 6 November 2015: . 5. ^UVT means "Unidad de Valor Tributario" - Tax Value Unit. Instead of setting a range in Colombian pesos, DIAN has a UVT value that is updated at least every year. 6. ^{{Cite news|url=https://papayaglobal.com/countrypedia/country/co/|title=Colombia - CountryPedia - Papaya Global|last=|first=|date=|work=|newspaper=|language=en-US|access-date=|via=}} External links
2 : Taxation in Colombia|Finance in Colombia |
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