Finance Siv Jensen will present the revised National Tuesday at 10:45.
Where will the Minister provide updated figures for the Norwegian economy, and suggestions the changes from the budget compromise wing parties agreed last fall.
The proposal to be presented by the Conservatives and the Progress Party will however stop negotiations with cooperation parties in Parliament before the result is clear.
There are negotiations with centrist
KrF and Left has so far not been involved in the preparation of the revised budget, with the exception of measures against child poverty and the design of the new system for vehicle taxes. First Tuesday morning they get insight into the proposals of the government.
But even before Siv Jensen starts his presentation Tuesday is part details out.
Aftenposten has collected leaks and it already presented by ministers in different fields:
1. Car taxes change – electric drive benefits be protected
The government and cooperative parties were in our agreed new principles of car taxes. The Revised National is expected more concrete calculations showing what the changes will mean for car owners.
It is also clear that Vegtilsynet separated from NPRA to get an independent oversight which is under the Ministry of Transport.
40 million set aside for avalanches in Romarheim valley in Nordhordland.
2. Municipalities are promised more money
Both Prime Minister Erna Solberg (H) and Finance Minister Siv Jensen (FRP) warned in its conventions that the government will come up with more money to municipalities Tuesday.
Municipal income is estimated to be 1.3 billion lower this year than projected in the state budget from last year.
Aftenposten confirmed that municipalities are supplied with one billion as compensation for tax failure and NRK reports that municipalities should get 1.1 billion extra.
3. Bag fee is scrapped
One of the most publicized cases from the previous year’s budget settlement was agreement to collect than a billion kroner a year with a so-called bag fee. An environmental tax on each plastic and paper bag used in Norwegian food and merchandising. Just hours after the agreement was presented, fought However Left, the Christian Democrats and the Progressive Party about who had the least responsibility for the fee they all three had gone in together with Erna Solberg and Right.
After sending out draft proposal it was finally clear that bag fee still will be introduced this year, as was promised. The unpopular proposal is shelved.
4. Increased electricity tax – more expensive electricity
The cancellation means, however, that the Government lacks a billion in revenue, which they would otherwise have gotten out.
According to DN and NTB will the loss of income for the state covered by that electricity taxes increased. This means more expensive electricity for consumers. According to NTB increasing electricity tax by 0.5 cents, which should correspond to a 100-patch extra a year for an average household.
Aftenposten confirmed that plastic bag tax scrapped and that the loss of income collected by increased electricity tax.
5. Sets of millions to fight against child poverty
With 64 measures and 106 million extra over the revised national government wants to remove the gap between rich and poor children.
It emerged when the government and supporting parties KrF and Left last Wednesday presented his strategy to combat child poverty.
6. 1,000 new placements
Solberg promised in Aftenposten that the number of placements will be expanded by 1000. There are NAV will be responsible for providing restructuring seats, which should mitigate the potential consequences of the decline in including the oil industry.
7. Several disability loses on the budget – leads to new tax
Labor and Social Affairs Robert Eriksson (FRP) says government will give tax credits to further 15,000 disability pensioners in the revised national budget.
The government introduced 1. January this year, a transitional arrangement for disability pensioners, which meant that about 30,000 received tax credits.
New figures from the Tax Administration show that about 127,000 people will get a decrease in after-tax income after restructuring. There are more than was assumed in the state budget, according to Eriksson.
Specifically, the Government of the revised budget propose to extend the transitional arrangement by reducing the limit for drop in income for those who are covered, from 6000 to 4000 respectively.
8. 10.5 million to the information center on 22 July.
– It will be very powerful. The first floor of the high-rise will house the center. The venue is still characterized by the bomb that went off, said Municipal and modernization Minister Jan Tore Sanner (H) said.
Department of Historical Studies at NTNU has the professional responsibility for the center. The exhibition is designed in dialogue with AUF and support group for 22 July.
The memorial will be ready by 22 July 2016.
9. Animal Police attempt by autumn
– The Government starts pilot project with expensive police already this autumn, says Agriculture Minister Sylvi Listhaug (FRP) said.
The funding of 3 million included in the Government proposals for revised national budget.
The Government announced earlier this year that it wants to appoint a pilot project with expensive police in Oslo Police District. The project will last three years. Three people will be working in this unit, including a prosecuting lawyer.
Within the justice field it is also clear that the Oslo police receive 38.8 million extra to pay for extra security because of a heightened threat.
10. Proposes zero VAT also for online news
The Ministry of Culture has announced that they will go in for VAT exemption for news, whether on-line or paper.
– We go now to the EEA Surveillance Authority with a proposal for zero rate of VAT on all user fees of news and current affairs, irrespective of where they are published, says Widwey VG.
Printed newspapers have been exempt from VAT since 1970, but when the media publish news online, they must collect 25 per cent VAT of user payment.
11. Comes with details on ferry relief funds
Municipal Sanner (H) has also announced some changes whose details are not yet public.
During the General Assembly speech for a couple of weekends ago he notified that a separate ferry relief scheme was on the stairs, like a smaller tax measures that will reward municipalities in growth.
12. Millions of southern laboratory
Food Minister Monica Mæland (H) and climate minister Tine Sundtoft (H) told Monday that the Government proposes to allocate NOK 20 million to Mechatronics Innovation Lab (MIL), better known as Sørlandslab.
It is a joint research and development cooperation between industry and the University of Agder.
13. Funds for HV exercises in Finnmark and Troms
Finance Siv Jensen (FRP) has announced fresh funds for exercises for the Army and Heim Vernet in Finnmark in the revised national budget. Details of this are not known in advance. But Jensen promised funds congress Progress.
14. More initiatives in the Mediterranean
Erna Solberg has warned that support for the EU project Frontex in the Mediterranean will be increased. Frontex, the EU border control agency, which coordinates Member States’ national border guard to secure the EU’s external borders.
The government will in the revised national budget also increase support for Syria and neighboring countries with 250 million, to a total of one billion kroner in 2015.
In addition tripled the number of quota refugees with special medical needs from 20 to 60 refugees in 2015.
The Ministry of Justice also receive an additional grant of 11.3 million to proceedings Applicants.
15. Syria refugees taken in a parallel process
Hans Olav Syversen in KrF says he will post moderate demands on the table in negotiations with the government on the revised budget. Expenses for Syria refugees should not be included in the negotiations.
In parallel with the budget negotiations is the talks between the parliamentary leaders about how many Syrian refugees Norway accepts. But this will be two separate processes clarifies Syversen.
– Anything else would not have been particularly neat, he said.
centrist parties have little hope that breakthrough in negotiations in the wake of the announcement Tuesday.
– We have another economic situation than when the state budget was adopted, said Syversen and notes that the forecasts for economic growth in Norway has been revised down.
16. Same budget impulse
Aftenposten confirmed that the so-called “fiscal stimulus” – ie budget overall effect on economic growth – not changed compared to the state budget that was presented in the fall.
Just how much oil money Government plans to use the revised budget is not known.
17. Measures against radicalization
Aftenposten are told that it will be set aside new money for measures against radicalization of youth.
PST gets more than half of the nearly 130 million kroner government spends on strengthening efforts to combat terrorism and radicalization. The money comes in the revised national budget, type NTB.
– It is a stimulus package that goes to strengthen terror preparedness and prevention against radicalization and violent extremism, says Justice Minister Anders Anundsen (FRP) to TV 2.
Two claims from KrF
KrF therefore has two moderate demands into the negotiations on the revised National:
More money for municipalities that are experiencing tax failures due to crisis in the oil industry, and measures to combat child poverty.
– I am concerned that we not now comes with a whole host of additional requirements. This is a revised budget. Therefore, this points that will mean the most to us, said Syversen.
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