La tax reform which within two years will have to arise from the delegation that the Parliament granted to the Government in recent days is truly "the historic reform awaited for fifty years and a turning point for our system for our tax system" as claimed by the deputy minister Maurice Leo, who is the father of the reform, or, as the secretary of the Democratic Party affirms, Elly Schlein, "does the delegation deepen the already unbearable inequities of the tax system"? It is now difficult to say who is right because the delegation establishes a framework, the true content of which will be determined by the legislative decrees expected by July 2025. However, the fact that the reform scheme largely moves in the wake of the previous delegation granted to Draghi government and that the dreaded flat tax is only a distant and evanescent flag objective, leaves open the hope of an acceptable outcome, admitted and not granted, however, that the necessary financial backing for the reform is found.
On the other hand, the ugly mess consumed in Parliament on the unsustainable patrimonial on which the Government simply appeared as an amateur on the loose who once again speaks volumes about the mediocrity of Prime Minister Giorgia's party and government travel companions Melons. The facts are well known: last Thursday the Chamber passed an agenda of Italian left which commits the Government to evaluate the introduction of a wealth tax for incomes of natural persons exceeding 500 thousand euros. When he realized the mess he got himself into, the Government made an indecorous reverse, assuring that the "property account" will not exist. But such delicate matters, which have immediate repercussions on Italy's credibility on the markets, cannot be treated with such guilty frivolity. Melons down from the tower.