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

On March 12, 2026, the Colombian government, under President Gustavo Petro, issued decrees to tackle the emergency from heavy rains affecting Córdoba, Antioquia, La Guajira, Sucre, Bolívar, Cesar, Magdalena, and Chocó, declared on February 11 via Decree 0150.

Decree 0240 introduces tax measures: a 16% consumption tax on chance and gambling games operated exclusively online, calculated on gross revenues minus prizes; a temporary 19% tax normalization for omitted assets or nonexistent liabilities as of April 1, 2026; adjustments to the wealth tax including branches of foreign companies, payable in two installments in April and June; and transitory reductions in sanctions and interest for debts as of December 31, 2025, with 4.5% rates and only 15% sanctions if paid by April 30. DIAN gains powers for conciliations with up to 85% discounts.

Decree 0241 adds $8.6 trillion to the 2026 General National Budget, funded by these measures. Resources are allocated as follows: $1.6 trillion for Agriculture in land access and agribusiness recovery; $1 trillion for Education in school infrastructure; $1.3 trillion for Housing in resettlements and sanitation; $1.1 trillion for UNGRD in recovery; $626.220 million for Transport in roads and bridges; and $455.271 million for Health in trauma care and mental health.

Other decrees include 0242, suspending gas billing for affected users until service restoration and offering 12-month payment facilities for strata 1 and 2; 0243, granting governors and mayors powers to reorient budgets, defer taxes, and contract treasury credits up to 15% of revenues; 0244, providing up to 90% credit guarantees for the popular economy via FNG and FAG, subsidized by the state; and 0245, authorizing monetary transfers, food aid, and seed capital for victims by Prosperidad Social.

The Autonomous Fiscal Rule Committee (CARF) deemed the fiscal scenario 'unlikely' due to unclear spending cuts, estimating a $32.1 trillion shortfall. Petro replied it would be achieved with $16 trillion from taxing the rich and debt cost reduction. Bruce Mac Master, Andi president, criticized the package as an 'affront to democracy' harming investment, urging Constitutional Court suspension. María Claudia Lacouture of AmCham saw it as a 'shortcut' reviving struck-down measures.

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Discussions on X about Colombia's government decrees for the flood emergency focus on the $8.6 trillion budget addition and new 16% tax on digital bets. Business groups like ANDI and AmCham criticize the measures as opportunistic taxation that undermines investment and security, urging Constitutional Court review. Politicians decry the timing amid elections as a ploy, while media outlets detail aid allocations neutrally, and some local voices praise the response to victims' needs.

관련 기사

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.

President Gustavo Petro declared an economic emergency to address the crisis from heavy rains in northern Colombia. The measure aims to raise $8 billion through a temporary wealth tax on large companies and other levies. Critics question the management of existing resources and warn of economic impacts.

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President Gustavo Petro explained on his X account that economic reactivation funds will not come from the national budget, but from new taxes. This comes amid Decree 0150 of 2026, declaring an economic, social, and ecological emergency in eight northern Colombian departments due to the climate crisis.

President Gustavo Petro warned during a Council of Ministers meeting of potential food shortages in areas hit by floods from increased rainfall. He stated the situation will be prolonged and could spread to other regions, affecting agricultural production beyond June. He called for emergency decree measures to boost production and regulate costs such as land rentals.

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