Are you sure about this? Is this the way flat rate taxes are implemented in other countries, with other taxes added under different names?
Yes, countries with flat taxes have social insurance on top.
Are you sure about this? Is this the way flat rate taxes are implemented in other countries, with other taxes added under different names?
Yes, countries with flat taxes have social insurance on top.
No spinning there, just the facts. And the fun and games continue - see [broken link removed]No, the only fiction was the spin you put on it.
From my read of the article, they don't have to set themselves up as a business to pay less tax. The budget kindly hands them a little bonus, regardless of whether they are set up as a business or a sole trader.Just out of interest, how difficult is it for a self emplyed person earning €200k+ to set themselves up as a business and pay less tax?
From my read of the article, they don't have to set themselves up as a business to pay less tax. The budget kindly hands them a little bonus, regardless of whether they are set up as a business or a sole trader.
My question though was whether this pales by comparison when they could easily slash their effective rate of taxation by setting themselves up as a business.
don't they have some sort of very low tax rate in Spain for foreigners for the 1st 4 years they are working there, or something like that. It's done wonders for La Liga in fairness
Do you know what capital allowances are?
Basically someone who spends money on their business shouldn't have to pay income tax on that money as well. It would be like a plumber paying income tax on the money he spent buying a small warehouse.
Just out of interest, how difficult is it for a self emplyed person earning €200k+ to set themselves up as a business and pay less tax?