In Baja California, Hundreds of Businesses Lower the Curtain and Cut Thousands of Jobs; They Ask to Lower the Payroll Tax
6 Articles
6 Articles
In Baja California there is a constant closure of businesses that directly impacts economic activity and employment. The monthly departure of companies has triggered alerts among business agencies to an environment that hinders the operation and permanence of formal businesses in the state. This occurs while the private sector points to regulations and tax burdens as factors that pressure companies. Warnings point to effects that are already ref…
Tijuana.- Representatives of business organizations, headed by the Patronal Confederation of the Mexican Republic (Coparmex) Tijuana, called on the government of Baja California and the Congress of the State to reduce the Payroll Tax (ISN). Photo: Omar Rosette The proposal of the chambers of the private initiative is that this state tax, which pays the employers for wages to their workers, goes from 4.25 to 3 percent. Otherwise, they warned, mai…
Tijuana, December 15. Business chambers in Baja California joined forces to establish a joint stance on payroll tax (ISN), proposing its reduction to 3 percent, with the aim of making the state more attractive for investment, strengthening labor formality and improving economic competitiveness. During the positioning, the president of the Mexican Confederation of Employers (Coparmex) Tijuana, Roberto Vega, noted that Baja California currently ma…
They point out that Baja California has the highest rate in the country today.
Organismos presented a proposal for a better collection agreement. Coparmex, Index, Canacintra and Canieti business leaders in Baja California joined forces to reject the 4.25 % Nomine Tax increase approved by Congress and which would enter into force in 2026, becoming one of the entities with the highest rate in the country. Coparmex President Zona Costa, Roberto Vega, presented a proposal aimed at reducing fiscal pressure to strengthen product…
In order to maintain formal employment in Baja California, business leaders in Tijuana have asked the state government and Congress to reduce the payroll tax rate from 4.25% to 3.0% in the 2026 Revenue Law, an initiative currently under review by legislators. If this reduction is not achieved next year, the state could lose between 50,000 and 75,000 formal jobs and cease to… Source
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