HomeEmergencyColombia court orders Petro government to return emergency funds

Colombia court orders Petro government to return emergency funds

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BOGOTA, April 15 (Reuters) - Colombia's ‌Constitutional Court ordered President Gustavo Petro's government on Wednesday to ​return funds collected during an economic emergency that was declared unconstitutional.

The decision is the latest ⁠blow to the Petro administration's finances, strained by setbacks in Congress, where several proposals for fiscal reforms have failed to gain support.

The court had struck down ​the economic emergency declared by Petro's government in January to raise 11 trillion pesos ($3.07 billion) to ‌finance part of this year's budget.

The government had collected 1.67 trillion pesos ($467 million) as a result of the decrees enacted during the economic emergency, according to a source ⁠at the country's National Tax and Customs Directorate who spoke ⁠on condition of anonymity. 

The economic emergency is a state of exception that allows the government to make decisions by decree without prior authorization from Congress.

Among the measures the government had established during the state of emergency were a tax on ‌liquid assets exceeding 2.1 billion pesos, a special income tax for the financial ⁠sector, and a 19% tax on the sale of ‌alcoholic beverages and gambling, as well as on ​certain vehicles, motorcycles, and aircraft, among others.

On previous occasions when the court declared other economic emergencies unconstitutional, the ruling was not retroactive; meaning it did not ‌require the government to return the funds already collected.

Latin ​America’s fourth-largest economy is experiencing a ⁠deterioration in its finances, which forced the government in June ‌to suspend a fiscal ruling under which ⁠the Ministry of Finance raised the fiscal deficit target for 2025 to 7.1% of GDP, from an original 5.1%.

Last week, Finance Minister German Avila announced that he ​would present a new tax ‌reform bill to Congress worth 16 trillion pesos ($4.47 billion) to finance this year’s spending ⁠budget, less than three months before ​the end of the legislative period.

($1= 3,578.82 pesos)

(Reporting by Carlos Vargas; Editing ​by Sarah Morland and Brendan O'Boyle)

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