By Months: Kadri Tali

Total Months: 11

Fully Profiled: 11

06.2025

13 Speeches

The economic perspectives center on reducing the administrative burden associated with organizing sports events, making it possible to apply for a seasonal license valid for up to one year. The proposal by the Estonian Olympic Committee to amend the Income Tax Act was also discussed, aiming to allow sports club participation fees to be treated as training expenses and deductible from income tax returns. However, attention was drawn to the lack of legal clarity surrounding this specific amendment.
04.2025

1 Speeches

Our economic perspectives are geared towards growth, highlighting culture and sport as value-adding economic sectors whose direct contribution to the economy can be demonstrated. We support the involvement of the private sector and the use of a state mechanism to leverage corporate donations, seeking new funding models that prioritize development over mere survival. Furthermore, there is a recognized need to review the design of the gambling tax.
02.2025

2 Speeches

Economic views are focused on growth and fiscal ingenuity, recognizing the limited state of public funds. There is robust support for leveraging the potential of private sector involvement to build culture and sport into a strong economic sector that generates added value. It is believed that smart tax design could generate 50 times more tax revenue over a ten-year horizon.
12.2024

1 Speeches

The speaker cites economics and finance as fields plagued by incompetent "experts," but fails to articulate specific positions regarding taxes, spending, or regulations. Insufficient information.
11.2024

1 Speeches

Economic considerations support reducing the administrative burden and increasing fiscal efficiency by eliminating the redundant systems established by sports clubs for obtaining income tax refunds. The objective is to simplify the system, which should reduce the workload for both the state and sports organizations.
09.2024

5 Speeches

Economic perspectives are reflected in the emphasis placed on budgetary discipline, specifically highlighting the difficulties in securing 30 million euros to increase school lunch support within the framework of the current state budget strategy. The report also covers discussions regarding the impact of the minimum wage hike on kindergarten fees and the limitation of local government financial autonomy.
05.2024

1 Speeches

Economic outlooks treat opera art as a significant economic sector that demonstrates the nation's resilience and capacity, and functions as a national export. Investments in cultural infrastructure are supported to ensure international cooperation, financial aid, and job creation for artists, composers, and technical teams.
04.2024

2 Speeches

The speaker views education as a direct investment in the country's intellectual assets (brainpower, thinking skills). He supports culture and sports as economic sectors that should be stimulated, and he is interested in creating mechanisms for attracting private funding so that businesses can invest nearly a billion euros into the sector.
03.2024

1 Speeches

Education is treated explicitly as both an investment and an economic sector, emphasizing its role in ensuring economic growth and a skilled workforce. The state's continued commitment to raising teachers' salaries is supported, viewing this as a national priority despite the uncertain times. The necessity of a skilled workforce is highlighted.
02.2024

4 Speeches

They advocate for financial mechanisms aimed at economic growth and the active involvement of the private sector in funding culture and sports, viewing this as the only viable option. They are critical of state-led redistribution and the double taxation of income for the purpose of establishing social guarantees, preferring instead to create the necessary conditions for growth.
01.2024

1 Speeches

Education is treated as a vital investment, one that is more important and effective for the state than major investments in the energy or national defense sectors, whose efficacy is not guaranteed. It supports the fair compensation of teachers by directing the responsibility for salary payment to local governments and foundations, rather than solely to the state.