Senate Approves Income Tax Exemption Threshold Increase to $29,000

Yesterday, the Senate approved a new income tax exemption threshold, raising it from $26,000 to $29,000. This change means that workers earning less than $29,000 per year will no longer have to pay income tax. 

The Senate discussed various tax laws, including the Income and Business Tax (Amendment) Bill of 2024, which was introduced by the Leader of Government Business, Senator Eamon Courtenay. He explained that this measure would help workers by “exempting a significant number of people from having to pay income and business tax.”

Chris Coye, the Minister of State for Finance, stressed the impact of the change, stating that it would benefit over 2,800 public officers whose average income is between $26,000 and $28,000. These workers will no longer have to pay taxes, effectively increasing their net take-home pay by $900 starting January 1st.

Coye also highlighted how the current tax structure often leads to tax evasion, as workers receiving salary increases end up with lower take-home pay due to higher tax rates. The new threshold aims to reduce this issue and provide more financial relief for hard-working Belizeans.

 

Senate Passes Amendment to Marriage Act, Making Marriage Legal at 18

One Year of War: Gaza Death Toll Surpasses 41,000

It’s been 365 days of war since the October 7 attacks unleashed a devastating conflict between Israel and Hamas. The war led to the Gaza Strip bearing the brunt of the war’s violence. Since then, the death toll has only increased while humanitarian conditions deteriorate. The fighting has spilled into Lebanon.

Hamas is a Palestinian Sunni Islamist military and sociopolitical movement and a U.S.-designated foreign terrorist organisation (FTO). Hamas’s primary base of action and support is in the Gaza Strip, which it has controlled since 2007.

On October 7, 2023, Hamas launched the “Al-Aqsa Flood” offensive, firing around 5,000 rockets at southern Israel. This resulted in at least 1,189 deaths. Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu declared that “the country is at war.”

On October 27, 2023, Israel launched a ground offensive in Gaza. By December, the United Nations reported over 20,000 deaths in Gaza. The UN warned of imminent famine in Gaza, while the International Court of Justice ordered Israel to prevent genocidal acts. 

The health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza reported that as of October 6, 2024, at least 41,870 people have been killed in the nearly year-long war between Israel and Palestinian militants.

Prior to the war, 36 hospitals were functioning in Gaza, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).

As of August this year, 19 hospitals have stopped functioning, and the remaining 17 are partially functioning, the WHO reported. There are currently no fully functioning hospitals, according to the Global Health Agency.

Exit mobile version