President Gustavo Petro and Finance Minister Germán Ávila announcing Colombia's $16 trillion tax reform at a press conference.
President Gustavo Petro and Finance Minister Germán Ávila announcing Colombia's $16 trillion tax reform at a press conference.
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Finance ministry confirms $16 trillion tax reform after court ruling

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After the Constitutional Court struck down the December 2025 emergency economic decree, the Colombian government will present a tax reform to raise $16 trillion. Finance Minister Germán Ávila and President Gustavo Petro confirmed the plan in response to the fiscal imbalance. The measure aims to avoid cuts to social spending and address inherited deficits.

The Constitutional Court declared Decree 1390 of 2025 unconstitutional, under which the government had declared an economic emergency last December to raise about $11 trillion. The 6-2 decision prompted immediate reactions from the executive branch.

President Gustavo Petro criticized the ruling, arguing it exposes Colombians to more expensive debt, with rates rising from 7% to 13%. "The Constitutional Court, by not approving the emergency and suspending it, made real what was a probable supervening fact: effectively, the debt became more expensive by trillions of pesos," Petro said. He assured a new financing law will be presented to Congress to cover $16 trillion in budget underfunding.

Finance Minister Germán Ávila confirmed in a BLU Radio interview that the government will reintroduce the initiatives in a $16 trillion tax reform proposal. "We will present a tax reform proposal (...) we believe it will be on the order of $16 trillion," he stated. Ávila attributed the deficit to the previous government, particularly the Fuel Prices Stabilization Fund (Fepc), which cost $79 trillion from the budget.

Both leaders ruled out cuts to social programs, opting to review infrastructure investments and transfers to wealthy sectors. Ávila noted the net debt to GDP ratio stands at 58.5%, and contextualized inflation as global due to factors like the war in the Middle East.

लोग क्या कह रहे हैं

Discussions on X about the Colombian Finance Ministry's confirmation of a $16 trillion tax reform after the Constitutional Court's rejection of the emergency decree feature neutral reporting from major news outlets like La FM and BluRadio, highlighting the government's aim to adjust the 2026 budget without cutting social spending. Skeptical voices, including Red+ Noticias, note the timing four months before Petro's term ends, while users criticize it as another burdensome tax hike amid economic challenges. Overall sentiments lean negative to skeptical, with questions on congressional approval.

संबंधित लेख

Illustration of Colombian floods with government officials announcing emergency decrees for aid funding amid skeptical onlookers.
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Colombian government issues decrees to address flood emergency

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The Colombian government issued several decrees under the Economic, Social and Ecological Emergency declared due to floods in eight departments, including a 16% tax on digital bets and an $8.6 trillion addition to the 2026 budget. These measures aim to fund aid for victims and revive the local economy. Critics like Andi and AmCham question their impact on investment.

Colombia's Constitutional Court declared Legislative Decree 1474 of 2025 unconstitutional and ordered the Dian to return about $25 billion collected from emergency economic taxes in December. The Dian confirmed it will comply and implement measures within 30 days. Governors welcomed the ruling for easing regional finances.

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President José Antonio Kast's government presented its National Reconstruction Project to Congress, featuring about 40 measures to boost growth, including a corporate tax cut from 27% to 23% and tax reintegration. Ministers toured regions on Friday to defend the bill, as OTIC and IMF warn of labor and fiscal risks. A poll shows 54% believe Congress should approve it.

The Chamber of Deputies' Finance Committee began on Tuesday the detailed discussion of President José Antonio Kast's reconstruction and economic reactivation megareform, amid tensions over more than 1,295 amendments filed by the opposition.

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Presidency Minister José García Ruminot stated that the corporate tax cut from 27% to 23% is 'irrenunciable' and the heart of the Reconstruction National bill, the key project of José Antonio Kast's government with over 40 measures. His comments sparked divided reactions: opposition demands splitting the tax reform from post-fire reconstruction measures, while officialism backs it to boost the economy. The bill will enter Congress next week.

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