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Norway ending death tax ‘a big mistake’: Piketty

French economist Thomas Piketty has criticised Norway's decision to scrap inheritance tax at the start of this year as "a big mistake", arguing that it will inevitably lead to higher inequality in the country.

Norway ending death tax 'a big mistake': Piketty
Thomas Piketty talks about his Capital in the 21st Century. Photo: Screengrab
The 43-year-old professor at the Paris School of Economics, whose book ‘Capital in the Twenty-First Century’ topped the New York Times Bestseller list this year, told journalists in Helsinki that Nordic countries should not be complacent about inequality. 
 
“We don’t need to wait for the rise in inequality to be as large as in the US to start worrying about it," he said, according to Bloomberg news wires.
 
Norway's new right-wing coalition scrapped the country's inheritance taxes on fortunes above 470,000 kroner at the start of this year, following the example of Sweden, which abolished inheritance tax in 2005. 
 
Piketty, whose book tracks changes in inequality in wealth and income from the 18th century to the present day, focusing particularly on the rise in inequality since the 1970s, argued that inheritance tax was one of the best ways to keep inequality in check. 
 
“If we stop taxing inherited wealth and corporate profits, we’ll have very high taxes on labor income, very high taxes on wages,” he said. “Inheritance tax is only one way to keep balance between capital and labor.”
 
“The complete suppression of inheritance tax is to me a big mistake.”

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UKRAINE

Norway accelerating Ukraine aid

Norway's Prime Minister said Tuesday his country would accelerate its military and civilian aid for Ukraine for this year by seven billion kroner to a total of 22 billion kroner (£2 billion).

Norway accelerating Ukraine aid

The additional funds will be brought forward from a 75 billion kroner package the Scandinavian country has pledged to Ukraine covering 2023 to 2027 for military and civilian aid, which remains unchanged.

“It’s a matter of life and death for the people of Ukraine”, Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Store told a press conference.

“It is also a question of security and stability in Europe, and therefore also for Norway”, he said following a meeting with opposition leaders to secure a broad consensus on the aid.

Of the seven billion brought forward, six will go military aid, primarily anti-air defence and ammunition — which are desperately needed by Ukraine as it faces a Russian offensive in the east.

Norway will contribute to the financing of German and Czech initiatives in these two areas, Store said, while stressing that Russia was deliberately bombing “hospitals, residential areas and power stations”.

Of the 75 billion package dedicated to Ukraine, Norway will have used some 39.5 billion kroner by the end of 2024.

Norway — a major oil and gas producer that has benefited greatly from surging prices following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine — is one of the main contributors to Ukraine, according to a ranking by the Kiel Institute.

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