The rupture between employers is consumed. The Confederation of Small and Medium Business (CPME) will not go to the meeting organized by Medef on October 13 in Paris, says his boss, Amir Reza-Tofighti, in an interview with El Parisian published Tuesday night.
“No, we will not go to the Medef mobilization. This meeting has not been prepared collectively. We were not consulted during its preparation, otherwise we would have said that the calendar is poorly chosen,” the government “has not yet been designated,” said the president of the second representative organization of companies in France.
The announcement of this meeting last week by the president of Medef, Patrick Martin, had fallen short of the organizations of other employers. Michel Picon, president of the U2P (local companies) has already announced that he would not go to this meeting, refusing to see the small patterns that serve as “cannon fodder” for an “inverted class struggle.”
On the side of the CPME, instead of a meeting, “in the next few days, we will contact all the deputies and senators of all the stripes, so that our members can fulfill them and explain the reality of the challenges of the companies for the next budget,” explains Amir Reza-Tofighti.
The Dutreil Pact, established in 2003, aims to facilitate the transmission of companies reducing transfer rights. It allows a 75% reduction in the value of the transmitted values, under conditions of a six -year detention period (eight years initially).
This pact would be in Bercy’s viewfinder because it only requires placing at the family portfolio company “at least 50% of professional assets”, which makes it possible to place so many private assets. The Court of Auditors must also publish a report on this text soon, but for the CPME, “it is a red line,” warns Amir Reza-Tofighi.
Source: BFM TV
