demonstration in Rome on 6 December 2022
The measure should have been completed for some time now and while the Government tables are discussing the finishing touches to the Aid quater Decree (which will modify the rules of the 110% superbonus for the umpteenth time in the running), the construction world has prepared a great march on Rome with a very specific request.
Superbonus 110% and credit transfer: what’s the problem?
The same
press conference to present the Censis reportdespite the shareable aspects related to economic, fiscal, employment and environmental sustainability of the Superbonus 110%failed to highlight the main problem facing the construction sector: the blocking of assignments of building credits.
A blockage due to multiple factors including:
- the continuous regulatory changes;
- the rigid (and sometimes inappropriate) interpretations of the Revenue Agency;
- the sentences of the Cassation on preventive seizure;
which in fact completely blocked the purchase of building credits. And while until 6 November 2022, Poste Italiane could still be considered with its purchases of direct credits, now (excluding profiteering operations) businesses, professionals and taxpayers find themselves the victim of a system which, after so many initial promises, has shown complete inadequacy .
The March on Rome
Precisely for this reason, various groups of entrepreneurs, professionals and ordinary citizens were born spontaneously on Facebook, WhatsApp and Telegram, who organized a veritable march on Rome on 6 December 2022 to ask the Government to intervene immediately on the problem of blocking assignments.
The appointment is in Piazza della Repubblica at 9. The leaders of this initiative are the National Construction Class Action and ATC.