Egypt’s Morsi approves beer, alcohol, cigarette tax hikes

Egypt’s President Mohamed Morsi approved Sunday extra taxes on beer, alcohol, cigarette and soda.

Monday, December 10, 2012
Egyptian protesters during the riots against constitutional declaration issued by President Mohamed Morsi in Cairo, Egypt, Nov. 27, 2012.Net photo.

Egypt’s President Mohamed Morsi approved Sunday extra taxes on beer, alcohol, cigarette and soda.The tax hikes are included in Law No. 102 for the year 2012 issued by Morsi, which amended some provisions of the General Tax Law No. 11 for the year 1991. According to new amendments, the tax hike is 50 percent for cigarette, 25 percent for soda, 200 percent for beer, 150 percent for alcohol and 150 percent for tobacco.”The amendments are part of the government commitment to the reform program agreed upon with the International Monetary Fund to get a loan of 4.8 billion U.S. dollars,” Ehab al-Desouki, head of Economic Research Center of Sadat Academy, told Xinhua. "The decision is right but the timing is wrong,” al-Desouki added, citing that the tax hikes are imposed on commodities that are actually bad for health, "but they come at a time of tension, turmoil and protests.”Morsi’s Nov. 22 constitutional declaration, which aimed at expanding the president’s powers by making all his decrees issued since he came into office final and above judicial appeal, triggered waves of protests nationwide and deadly clashes between his opponents and supporters. The outraged judiciary authorities have vowed not to supervise the constitution referendum slated for Dec. 15.