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rvschuilenburg | 2 years ago
Then again, i can understand the argument that indirectly the company is paying tons of taxes because it is a big company. Losing that company + its employees might be a bigger negative in tax income than having those employees pay less taxes.
blackbear_|2 years ago
In this light I think that temporary tax breaks like this are a nice way to ease immigration and create more of a win-win situation.
> If you decide to live and work in The Netherlands, i would expect you to pay the same amount of taxes as others.
Fair, but worth noting that highly skilled migrants are also paid more than average, and thus the absolute amount of tax contributed in their lifetime turns out higher despite a few years of tax breaks.
piva00|2 years ago
They didn't receive education, their parents didn't get childcare support, it didn't cost a single penny in taxes from the host country to get skilled labour who'll pay higher taxes than a lot of native population even after tax breaks.
A temporary tax break would probably just even out the equation in the end, if the immigrant stays for longer then the balance would tilt back to the host country benefitting more in total taxes received over a lifetime.
pbmonster|2 years ago
I think it's naive to think this money ends up with the worker. Realistically, what happens is that companies like ASML can pay their migrant workers less than they would have to otherwise.
Remove this tax break, and ASML will have to raise salaries or lose those migrant workers to other countries - or, god forbid, hire more Dutch workers.
em500|2 years ago