The Republicans’ candidate wishes to double the amount beyond which the inheritance is imposed in France. Each parent could also, of his lifetime, give 100,000 euros every six years and no longer every fifteen years.
Le Monde with AFP
The candidate the Republicans (LR) to the presidential election, Valérie Pécresse, proposed in an interview in Figaro, published Sunday, January 23, to exonerate taxes the successions until at 200,000 euros per child . The President of the Ile-de-France region thus takes place in a debate already invested by several candidates, Jean-Luc Mélenchon at Eric Zemmour.
“I suppress the inheritance duties for 95% of the French”, ensures M me pecresse in Figaro – 85% of the French are already exempt. The candidate’s program thus provides that each child can inherit 200,000 euros in a discounted manner, against 100,000 euros today. The abatement would also be increased to 100,000 euros for indirect transmission, for example in case “a person inheritating his uncle or his sister”.
Valérie Pécresse also wants to increase the ceiling of the donations of the living donors taxoned. Each parent could give 100,000 euros every six years and no longer every fifteen years. The measurement would also concern “each of the grandchildren to allow the generational jump”, and would still be 50,000 euros for nephews and francies.
Retreat pushed at 65 years
The candidate offers in the same maintenance, in order to facilitate access to the property, to “generalize the loan at zero rate for the primo-acceders throughout the French territory and not only in the stretched areas”. Finally, it details measures of its program to increase the amount of family allowances.
To finance these measures, M me promises “a whole series of savings measures”, quoting retirement pushed to 65 years, unemployment insurance, or the active solidarity income (RSA) Reformed “To get out of the policy of Assistance”. It also evokes the reform of the State, “with a decentralization of skills to avoid the many administrative duplicates and a radical simplification of the standards”.