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Wednesday, June 10, 2026

1,500 big debtors owe to Greek state 36 billion euro in overdue taxes?

Taxes need to be paid but hardly anyone of those who celebrated the New Year’s Eve with champagne and caviar put their hands in their pockets. Two-thirds of the total amount of outstanding taxes to the state should be collected by 1,500 big debtors. But they can easily escape a system of corruption and the labyrinth of vetted interests and intermingling. Only the little man, the average worker and employee, the pensioner cannot escape the arm of the tax office.

According to Bloomberg, Greece should write off part of the 53 billion euros ($70 billion) of outstanding taxes owed to it as it will only be able to collect up to 20 percent of that amount, a report by the European Union and International Monetary Fund showed.

“More focus is needed on collection from the 1,500 biggest debtors, which make up two-thirds of the total amount owed to the state, according to an e-mailed copy of the November report from the Athens-based finance ministry today.”

State is owed 55 billion euro

The inefficiency of Greece’s tax collection mechanism combined with many people’s inability to pay their taxes for 2012 has resulted in expired debts for the January-November period last year to soar to 12 billion euros from 11 billion in the first 10 months, Finance Ministry data show.

As a result, as far as taxpayers are concerned, the combined total of both old and new debts to the state now stands at 55.5 billion euros.

The ministry has found that 1.13 million periodic statements for value-added tax for the same period have not been submitted by enterprises and the self-employed, which means that they have withheld the VAT received from customers for sales made or services provided.

Old debts amounted to 43.49 billion euros, 2.99 billion of which concerns state companies and corporations. Another 8.5 billion euros concerns firms that have already gone bankrupt while the remaining 31.8 billion relates to various taxpayers and enterprises. The state has only managed to collect about 1 billion euros of this old debt, while writing off some 359 million euros.

The new debts, recorded in 2012, amount to 12.07 billion euros and are expected to steadily increase. The state has only managed to collect 1.1 billion euros of this new debt and has written off another 179 million.

The total of 2.19 billion euros cashed in satisfies the requirement set out in the government’s bailout agreement with its creditors. However, the troika – as the representatives of the European Commission, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Bank are known collectively – says in its report that some 80 percent of outstanding debts cannot be collected.

The troika recommends that the government should open debtors’ accounts and automatically withdraw the amounts that taxpayers owe to the authorities. It also says that for outstanding debts to be reduced to a satisfactory level, the government should review its policy for writing off debts. (ekathimerini)

We should also know how much the state owes to people in tax and VAT returns.

Old debts, new debts, billions here and millions there, the Troika stole from us not only the lucky coin in our New Year’s cake but the whole of the Vasilopita.

 

 

 

 

 

8 COMMENTS

  1. Has anyone just asked politely of these people to pay their debt. Maybe we should just ask them. Mr. (add name), will you please pay the money you owe, so the rest of us can breathe a bit better and not have to burn wood in our furnaces.

  2. Old debts, new debts, billions here and millions there, the Troika stole from us not only the lucky coin in our New Year’s cake but the whole of the Vasilopita.

    I have to disagree. The Troika did not steal anything. It is the home grown Greek nomenklatura who ‘ate’ and is still stuffing their gobs with our money.

  3. Oh, I almost forgot THE solution to get those 1500 to pay up! There should be international sanctions and travel restrictions against those individuals. Bit like they did with the Khadaffi-family or any other horrible dictatorship. A nice international arrest warrant would be nice too and an international tribunal in The Hague. Because these 1500 are so well protected by the nomenklatura that they never ever will change their ways otherwise…
    Yes, I also like to daydream in 2013! 😉

    • therefore I worte the transition from 2012 to 2013 was soft. nothing changed. and it will not change.

  4. Why ask politely? Why not bring down on the swindlers
    the full force of the law? I pay my taxes in full and have
    never tried to swindle my government. If I ever did I would
    expect to pay the price and, anyway, I have too much respect for my
    country and it’s needs to withhold it’s rightful taxes
    I was going to ask if these 1500 tax evaders have no shame but perhaps
    I am being too naive.
    This ex resident of Corfu wishes all my Greek friends a blessed,
    peaceful and prosperous New Year and an end to blatant corruption.

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