Italy plans levy on extra-EU parcels, higher taxes on financial transactions

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ROME, Dec 11 (Reuters) – High-tax Italy plans to apply a levy on shipments from non-EU countries worth ​up to 150 euros ($176.31) and intends to double its ‌tax on financial transactions, as Rome seeks ways to fund costly budget ‌amendments, official documents have shown.

The contribution on low-value postal packages, set at 2 euros for each shipment, is expected to garner 122.5 million euros next year and 245 million in ⁠both 2027 and 2028, ‌according to parliamentary documents seen by Reuters.

With this move, which is in line with a proposal ‍being discussed at European Union level, Italy targets online platforms such as Shein and Temu and aims to protect its fashion industry ​from low-cost foreign imports mostly from China.

EU customs authorities ‌handled around 4.6 billion low-value packages bought online in 2024, 91% of them coming from China and double the 2023 figure, latest data shows.

The government also intends to increase Italy’s tax weighing on the transfer of shares and other financial ⁠instruments to 0.4% from a ​current 0.2%, in a move that ​should yield an additional 337 million euros from next year.

Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s government forecast in September ‍that the politically ⁠sensitive tax burden — the level of taxes and social contributions as a proportion of GDP — is expected to ⁠rise to 42.8% this year from 42.5% in 2024, among the highest ‌levels in developed economies.

($1 = 0.8508 euros)

(Reporting by Giuseppe ‌Fonte; Editing by Crispian Balmer)