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Govt set to launch 2023 budget bill

Marriage bonus will not feature says premier's office after row

Redazione Ansa

(ANSA) - ROME, NOV 21 - The government is set to launch a 32 billion euro 2023 budget bill containing 21 billion euros of measures to help struggling families and business with their power bills amid the energy crisis sparked by the Ukraine war.
    Among the other mooted measures are the cancellation of VAT on bread, pasta and milk to help with the cost of living crisis, government sources say.
    The labour tax wedge is expected to be cut by three points for those on low incomes.
    A flat tax is set to be introduced too, and the threshold is expected to be raised to 85,000 euros a year for the self-employed, sources said.
    The controversial citizenship wage basic income for job seekers and the poor, a flagship policy of the populist 5-Star Movement (M5S) when it was in power, is set to be reduced and reformed so that claimants can no longer benefit after refusing job offers.
    The government is also working on a reform to the pension system to allow early retirement at 'quota 103', when people are 62 and have paid in 41 years of contributions.
    The government has denied that the budget will also contain a 200 euro bonus for people who get married in church, after the League proposed the measure but then amid a furore said it would be extended to all marriages.
    "The so-called 'marriage bonus' will not feature in the package," said the office of Premier Giorgia Meloni.
    Cabinet is meeting at around five pm Monday to discuss the budget bill, which must be approved by the end of the year and which will be sent to Brussels for approval before it is passed.
    (ANSA).
   

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