Florida, Jan. 6 – The non-fulfillment of bank deposits by economic actors of the private sector continues in Florida to the detriment of the municipality’s financial activity, limited by the state’s priority of satisfying in time the monetary liquidity needed for the payment of salaries and the rest of the population’s cash demands.
Yelaín Muñiz López, deputy superintendent of economic affairs of the Administration Council in the territory, informed that at the beginning of December last year, cashier’s inspections were carried out here to private entities that failed to comply with the deposits and they found amounts of cash higher than those declared, in clear violation of the provisions of the Resolution of the Central Bank of Cuba.
As in previous government controls, it could even be inferred that there are fiscal under-declarations, which would be a more serious and damaging violation for the financial order and the state of the economy of the Floridian municipality, where more income is needed to cover the budget deficit and to have the necessary finances to materialize the works of social welfare and local development.
According to a report from the Municipal Administration, during the most recent exercise to fight crime and illegalities, in addition to cashier’s inspections to detect bank deposit defaults, some 20 forced sales had to be carried out in the private sector in Florida due to price violations and problems with the legal documentation required to justify the commercial activity and the origin of the merchandise.