Final Word from Monday, March 12, 2012
One of our recurrent themes in recent months has been criticism of the Czech business community for being too self-interested. Instead of promoting general principles that help the economy in the long term, such as low taxes and elimination of waste and corruption, many influential businesses and trade organizations concentrate only on what is beneficial to them and adopt a let-the-rest-be-damned attitude. Many businesses that are subject to 20% VAT on their goods were happy to see a unified rate of 17.5%, because their own rate was falling. However, their lackadaisical attitude toward what is right for the country is now coming back to haunt them: Petr Nečas suddenly wants to raise their 17.5% rate to 21%. Perhaps now we will hear from them what we should have been hearing all along - that taxes of any kind should only be raised as a last resort, after the theft and waste in the budget have been tackled.[Czech Republic value-added tax reform changes single]
Glossary of difficult words
(to come back) to bite you in the rear/ass - to have negative consequences later;
recurrent - occurring often or repeatedly;
to let the rest be damned - to show no concern for the impact of something on others;
lackadaisical - lacking enthusiasm and determination; carelessly lazy;
to come back to haunt one - when the consequences of a bad decision have negative consequences later;
as a last resort - when all else has failed;
to tackle (a problem) - to make determined efforts to deal (with a problem or issue).