Hotels, Resorts, Villas
Hotels, Resorts, Villas
Hotels, Resorts, Villas
Hotels, Resorts, Villas


Eight per thousand edit
extracted from Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia (using Wikipedia Reflection Script)


 

Eight per thousand - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Eight per thousand

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search

Eight per thousand, or otto per mille, is an Italian law under which Italian taxpayers can choose to whom devolve a compulsory 8 ‰ = 0.8 % ('eight per thousand') from their annual income tax return between an organized religion recognised by Italy or, alternatively, to a social assistance scheme run by the Italian State.1 This declaration is made on the IRPEF form. People are not required to declare a recipient; in that case the law stipulates that this undeclared amount be distributed among the normal recipients of such taxes in proportion to what they have already received from explicit declarations. For this reason, the Catholic Church receives 87% of the proceedings with only 34% of people explicitly indicating so; 60% of people does not declare a destination for such money at all. The Church of Assemblies of God in Italy refuses to benefit from the undeclared portion.

Contents

History

Originally the Italian government of Benito Mussolini, under the Lateran treaties of 1929 with the Holy See, paid a monthly salary to Catholic clergymen. This money was meant as a compensation for the nationalization of Church properties after the unification of Italy. This salary was called the congrua. The eight per thousand law was created as a result of an agreement, in 1984, between the Italian government and the Holy See.

Current situation

The last official statement of Italian Ministry of Finance made in respect of the year 2004 singles out seven beneficiaries: the Italian State, the Catholic Church, the Waldenses, the Jewish Communities, the Lutherans, the Seventh-day Adventists and the Assemblies of God in Italy.

Recipient  %
of total fund
 %
Indicated on tax form
Catholic Church 87.25% 34.56%
Italian State 10.28% 4.07%
Waldenses 1.27% 0.50%
Jewish Communities 0.42% 0.16%
Lutherans 0.31% 0.12%
Seventh-day Adventists 0.27% 0.10%
Assemblies of God in Italy 0.20% 0.08%
Not indicated or invalid N/A 60.4%

In 2000, the Catholic Church raised almost a billion euros, while the Italian State received about 100 million euros.

See also

References



Copyright Wikipedia.com.