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Post by crojoe on Aug 13, 2013 13:23:23 GMT 1
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Post by usplitu on Aug 30, 2013 10:55:06 GMT 1
The Adriana Hotel on the Riva is currently swagged in lovely Porezna Uprava "bunting" and is all closed up. I wonder how much extra cash they had ?
Edit : as per Slobodna Dalmacija
Tax inspectors closed on Wednesday Split famous cafe and restaurant "Adriana", located right in the middle of the promenade, and the reason is, as we have learned, thirty kuna surplus in hand! According to Stipe Gele, owner of "Adriana", which we found in front of the bars in the moments when his IRS stamped door and the cash register, restaurant and bar will be closed for five days. - In addition, they wrote to me and a fine of 20 thousand. Problem is, in fact, emerged as one our waitress, or student, issued false account. Why she did it, whether it was just an error, or is something else going on here, not entering into this. Simply, they can not control all the employees, and so far we have never had such problems. After it was established that in hand we have a surplus of 37 kuna. I begged the inspectors that we increase the fine, and that we should leave the premises open. But they did not want to hear.
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Post by usplitu on Aug 30, 2013 11:28:11 GMT 1
Apparently the state inspectors, between the beginning of June and the middle of August, have temporarily closed 155 restaurants. Most of these closures were in Dalmatia and were for amounts of less than one hundred kuna.
Maybe I'm naive, but doesn't it cost the tax department more in tax income to shut the premises down rather than issue a higher fine? I understand that in the case of Carpe Diem, it was such a large amount of money it was obvious tax avoidance, but for cases involving less than 100 kunas? Closure seems excessive in a struggling economy.
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Post by crojoe on Aug 30, 2013 11:38:06 GMT 1
Apparently the state inspectors, between the beginning of June and the middle of August, have temporarily closed 155 restaurants. Most of these closures were in Dalmatia and were for amounts of less than one hundred kuna. Maybe I'm naive, but doesn't it cost the tax department more in tax income to shut the premises down rather than issue a higher fine? I understand that in the case of Carpe Diem, it was such a large amount of money it was obvious tax avoidance, but for cases involving less than 100 kunas? Closure seems excessive in a struggling economy. Just shows you how out of touch these government agencies are, that the old timers in parliament can never find a happy medium. Where else in most "normal" countries do you get shut down completely unless it's a risk to health & safety? They could have fined and issued a warning, but no, lets shut it all down. To me there might be more then meets the eye or news report, a bit of backroom negotiations, payments, rivalries and crooked inspectors? This country still operates like it was a communistic state, state control over everything. The best thing they did was require all businesses to link up to one core tax system (which netted them an extra 7 billion Kuna this year alone), but I guess they have not yet found a happy medium or understanding.
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Post by indianalindsay on Aug 30, 2013 17:52:07 GMT 1
Apparently the state inspectors, between the beginning of June and the middle of August, have temporarily closed 155 restaurants. Most of these closures were in Dalmatia and were for amounts of less than one hundred kuna. Do you have a list of them?
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Post by Ribaric on Aug 31, 2013 1:47:59 GMT 1
As an aside, I was with a group yesterday at Varazdin's Spancirfest where the whole town is heaving under the weight of thousands. Some restaurants have opened their toilets to the public on payment of 2 kuna per person. You guessed it... having paid my 2 kuna, I received a fiscalisation receipt - at the insistence of the person 'guarding' the loo. 
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Post by usplitu on Aug 31, 2013 9:56:05 GMT 1
Apparently the state inspectors, between the beginning of June and the middle of August, have temporarily closed 155 restaurants. Most of these closures were in Dalmatia and were for amounts of less than one hundred kuna. Do you have a list of them? No I don't have any details, sorry. The information came from Slobodna Dalmacija.
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Post by dominic753 on Mar 27, 2015 9:14:23 GMT 1
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