Brendan Burgess
Founder
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Their employer will pay 11.05% on top of that €100k so the marginal rate of tax paid on their income is 63%, they just don't see the first 11% being taken away.Some professions can't incorporate, so they would have no way of limited the income that is taxable. If earning over €100k, they already pay 55% in tax. This would increase it to 61.5% in tax.
Meanwhile, an employee at a multinational, earning over €100k pays tax at 52% plus gets free company shares.
Bit of a disparity in taxation between the two.
Why would you assume that the employees would receive an additional 11.05% in income if their employer didn't have to make those PRSI contributions?Their employer will pay 11.05% on top of that €100k so the marginal rate of tax paid on their income is 63%
Why would you assume that the employees would receive an additional 11.05% in income if their employer didn't have to make those PRSI contributions?
How does one get these "free company shares"? Pretty much every type I know of involves tax, at the margin rate.Meanwhile, an employee at a multinational, earning over €100k pays tax at 52% plus gets free company shares.
Employers pay PRSI on wages, but not compensation in the form of company shares as I understand it.How does one get these "free company shares"? Pretty much every type I know of involves tax, at the margin rate.
That is why my solution is the simplest.
Put the contributions into a pot in the person's name.
Then it won't be regarded as a tax.
And if the self-employed don't want to contribute any more than 4% , fine. They will just get very little pension when they retire.
Brendan
How does one get these "free company shares"?
At the moment we're also subsidizing most self employed pensions, but it's hard to demand they pay up when they'll then be getting back less than they pay in. For regular employees that terrible value is disguised by having the employer pay the bulk of the PRSI.
Yes, the pay tax on them when they vest but they don't have to buy them.How does one get these "free company shares"? Pretty much every type I know of involves tax, at the margin rate.
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