Austrian lower house approves halving VAT on essential food items

It ⁠plans to fund it in part through a levy on retail parcel deliveries that could ⁠raise about €280 million a year and which has yet to clear the lower house. * ​The Greens said the measure did not go far enough in helping ⁠low-income households and criticised the fact that funding for it has yet to be secured.

Austrian lower house approves halving VAT on essential food items

Austria's lower house of parliament approved ​legislation on Thursday halving ​value-added tax on foods the conservative-led ‌government ​deems essential, the main hurdle the inflation-fighting measure needed to clear to become law. * The text reduces VAT ‌on items including milk, bread, eggs, rice, flour and some fruits and vegetables to 4.9% from 10% as of July 1.

* The three ruling parties - the ‌conservative People's Party, the Social Democrats and the liberal Neos - approved the legislation ‌while the two parties in opposition, the far-right Freedom Party (FPO) and the Greens, did not. * The government estimates the measure will cost around €400 million ($464 million) and save the average household ⁠roughly €100 ​per year. It ⁠plans to fund it in part through a levy on retail parcel deliveries that could ⁠raise about €280 million a year and which has yet to clear the lower house.

* ​The Greens said the measure did not go far enough in helping ⁠low-income households and criticised the fact that funding for it has yet to be secured. * ⁠FPO ​lawmaker Michael Fuertbauer criticised the selection of items that qualify, saying: "Rye bread will benefit, rye flour will not. Fresh French fries will benefit, ⁠frozen French fries will not. Salt will benefit, herb salt will not. Butter will benefit, ⁠herb butter ... ⁠will also!"

* The legislation must still clear the upper house and be signed into law but there is little ‌doubt that ‌it will. ($1 = 0.8626 euros)

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