Slovakiaâs populist government has announced plans to drastically raise value-added tax (VAT) on books to help fix its public finances, drawing condemnation not only from booksellers and publishers but also far-right, pro-Russian propaganda groups seeking to circulate their ideas in print.
Announcing the new VAT rate this week, Slovakiaâs finance minister, Ladislav Kamenický, claimed studies had shown that books were âprimarily purchased by wealthier segments of the populationâ and could therefore be taxed at the new basic rate of 23% rather than the current rate of 10%.
The step is part of a general increase of the basic VAT rate announced by the coalition government headed by Robert Fico, aimed at addressing Slovakiaâs excessive public deficit by raising â¬50m (£42m) in 2025. Under the proposal, basic food, medicine and textbooks would be exempt from the VAT rise or taxed at a lower rate than before.
The rate rises comes amid an increasingly aggressive stance by Ficoâs government towards the culture sector, brought into the open by its dismissal last month of the directors of the countryâs national gallery and national theatre.
If the tax changes get passed by parliament and come into effect in January, it would make Slovakia one of only two countries in Europe not to have reduced VAT rates for books â a measure whose intangible positive effects on the economy, education and democracy are mostly agreed to outweigh financial benefits.
Kamenickýâs comments about the supposed affluence of bibliophiles have been greeted with derision in the central European country. On social media, Slovaks posted videos of themselves admiring the newly recognised financial assets on their bookshelves, to a soundtrack of Abbaâs Money, Money, Money.
Juraj Heger, the chair of Slovakiaâs Association of Publishers and Booksellers, questioned the finance ministerâs claim that books were mostly bought by the well-off, saying recent surveys had shown only a marginal difference between the book-buying habits of high- and medium-income earners.
Higher VAT would also not help poorer book-buyers, he added, since it would probably result in higher book prices and mostly affect already struggling booksellers.
âPeople are very angry,â Heger told the Guardian. âThe ministry of culture is destroying everything that has been built up over decades.â
âThe book market in Slovakia is very small, making about â¬100m a yearâ, he added. âThis decision will lead to people buying fewer books, so the government will only be able to raise very little money from this.â
Until now, Denmark has been a European outlier by levying books with as much as 25% of VAT, though the Scandinavian country compensates for the additional burden with promotional support and grant schemes for publishers.
All other countries in the EU make use of legislation that allows them to apply reduced VAT rates to book publishing. The average VAT on books in the EU is about 6%, and in some European countries â including the UK, Ireland, Norway and Slovakiaâs neighbour, the Czech Republic â books are zero-rated for VAT purposes.
Latvia raised its VAT rate for books from 5% to the 21% standard rate at the start of 2009 but reversed the measure only eight months later, after lay-offs at publishing houses and a sharp decrease in sales.
Ficoâs government has set a target of reducing Slovakiaâs deficit from an estimated 6% to 4.7% of GDP next year. âConsolidation is, as the English say, âa mustâ,â the prime minister said on Tuesday.
The tax plans have earned Fico, an admirer of Vladimir Putin and Hungaryâs illiberal leader, Viktor Orbán, criticism from the far right.
Roman Michelko, of the far-right Slovak National party (SNS), who chairs the parliamentâs culture and media committee, compared the planned higher VAT on books to the policies of communist era Czechoslovakia.
The director of Torden, a publishing house specialising in anti-western, pro-Russian and conspiracy theory books, said the policy had revealed the âwretchedness and shallowness of the thinking of our governmentâ.
Robert Merva, whose catalogue contains titles such as Putinâs Pilgrimage, Democracy is Total Nonsense and A Brief History of (Almost) Everything Paranormal, suggested the tax plan meant Ficoâs nationalist government was in fact working âin the service of foreign interestsâ.