Cuba Raises Taxes on Real Estate Transactions
14ymedio, Reinaldo Escober, Havana, 15 May 2017 — On 11 May a new law
went into effect in Cuba that imposes a determined price on the buying
and selling of housing. The simple announcement, a month earlier, set
off a frenzy in the notary offices to complete the paperwork for pending
sales before the new rules went into effect. Some classified ads even
included the date as the deadline to close the deal.
Since November 2011, when Raul Castro's government allowed citizens the
right to buy and sell their homes, an obligation was imposed on both
buyers and sellers to pay the state a tax of 4% on the transaction.
In most cases, this levy was not calculated on the amount of money
actually paid for the property, but on the basis of the price that the
state had assigned to the home, which is recorded in the property document.
The Fiction
The Housing Act of July 1985 converted all tenants who were renting into
owners. The value of the properties they took possession of was
calculated by multiplying one month's rent by 240, the number of months
in 20 years.
Those who acquired a house as of from July 1 of that year, without
making any up front payment, paid the bank, within 20 years, the price
of their new house, which was calculated taking into account the square
meters of living space.
It does not occur to anyone to sell for 10,000 CUP a house for which
they can ask 30,000 CUC (that is 75 times more money), much less to
refer to the real price when they can take advantage of the price shown
on the initial title when paying the taxes.
In the cases of those who had paid rent before 1 July 1985, it is very
difficult to find a home whose price as stated in the property title
exceeds 10,000 Cuban pesos (about $400 US), because as a rule the
monthly rent did not exceed 10% of the renter's salary, and at that time
almost no one earned more than 400 Cuban pesos (CUP) a month. And the
values, calculated based on square meters, almost never reached 20,000 CUP.
That law, which boasted that it converted leasers into owners, did not
allow the newly created owners to sell the property, so the prices
inscribed on the title were evidence of the "character of fairness of
the Revolution," in giving the most humble workers the opportunity to
legally posses a home. To put it in the language of the time, this was a
"political matter."
The Reality
At the time the right to buy and sell houses was granted, the
consequences of the country's system of two currencies – Cuban
convertible pesos and Cuban pesos – were already in place. The most
notable feature of this system is that workers are paid in the "national
currency" – Cuban pesos – but almost everything that has real value must
be bought in "hard currency" – Cuban convertible pesos, each of which is
worth 25 times a Cuban peso. Housing did not escape this rule.
It does not occur to anyone to sell for 10,000 CUP a house for which
they can ask 30,000 CUC (that is 75 times more money), much less to
refer to the real price when they can take advantage of the price shown
on the initial title when paying the taxes. That evidence of fairness,
reflected with a symbolic number in the property titles, could not be
brutally reversed by the Revolution. But when citizens become cunning,
the state cannot play the fool.
This is how the new "reference prices" came about.
The new methodology does not take into consideration how many years of
salary a worker must invest to pay the new prices and also does not
indicate the square meters of living space. Now the value of a housing
unit is calculated by a set of factors. Among these is the number of
rooms and whether it has parking, patios or gardens. The construction
characteristics of the homes are identified depending on whether they
have masonry walls, heavy or light roofs, or if they have been
constructed with other materials.
And the most significant factor is where the property is located. There
are five groups and each corresponds to a "location coefficient," where
the word coefficient has the meaning given by mathematicians to a
multiplicative factor. Therefore, once the housing value is established,
the resulting number is multiplied by 7, 6, 5, 4, or 1.5 depending on
where the home is located.
This onerous multiplication is not accompanied by revolutionary slogans
or theoretical considerations about social justice.
Obviously, the state does not care what anyone spends to buy a house,
but it does care how much it can raise through that 4% tax on the
reference value.
Paternalism is over. That time when a local assembly (a political
entity) assigned a home to worker based on his or her "social virtue"
and "labor merits" is a thing of the past. The state no longer gives, it
only takes away. Consequently, the citizen no longer feels that he must
surrender, but rather he must defend himself. That seems to be the
signal of the new times.
Source: Cuba Raises Taxes on Real Estate Transactions – Translating Cuba
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http://translatingcuba.com/cuba-increases-taxes-on-real-estate-transactions/
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