By Plenary Sessions: Andrei Korobeinik

Total Sessions: 4

Fully Profiled: 4

2024-05-30
15th Riigikogu, 3rd sitting, plenary sitting
Economic policies are centered on income redistribution and active state intervention aimed at stimulating the economy. There is strong support for taxing banks' excess profits and introducing a progressive income tax to secure an additional billion euros for the budget. Furthermore, they oppose budget cuts made purely "on an Excel basis"—cuts that disproportionately impact the poor—and criticize the passive strategy of merely waiting for economic growth.
2024-05-29
15th Riigikogu, 3rd session, plenary session
Supports progressive taxation, emphasizing the need to introduce a digital tax for large corporations and take money from the wealthy, not from pensioners. He criticizes the government's economic policy, calling it detrimental to economic growth and increasing bureaucracy, citing the practice of requesting duplicate data as an example. He advocates for stimulating the economy by encouraging consumption and reducing the number of civil servants using artificial intelligence.
2024-05-28
15th Riigikogu, third session, plenary session
The speaker is a strong proponent of social justice and income redistribution, while opposing an income tax structure that effectively takes money from the poor to fund pay raises for the wealthy. They support implementing a solidarity tax on banks and believe that allowing the wealthy to retain more capital slows down economic circulation and growth. The government's economic decisions are viewed as exacerbating inequality.
2024-05-08
15th Riigikogu, 3rd session, plenary session.
Economic views are strongly focused on social justice and state intervention during a crisis to assist the poorer population. The policy supports a bank solidarity tax as a permanent taxation scheme that would bring half a billion euros annually to the state budget. It opposes tax incentives aimed at the wealthy and the imposition of taxes on pensions, emphasizing that such choices harm the economic circulation.