France Considers Raising Taxes on Internet Giants (reuters.com) 302
France's Finance Minister has drafted a new law to tax internet giants, reports Reuters:
A three percent tax on the French revenue of large internet companies could yield 500 million euros [$568 million U.S. dollars or £429 million] per year, French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said on Sunday. Le Maire told Le Parisien newspaper the tax is aimed at companies with worldwide digital revenue of at least 750 million and French revenue of more than 25 million euros.
He said the tax would target some 30 companies, mostly American, but also Chinese, German, Spanish and British, as well as one French firm and several firms with French origins that have been bought by foreign companies. The paper listed Google, Amazon, Facebook and Apple (the four so-called "GAFA" companies) but also Uber, Airbnb, Booking and French online advertising specialist Criteo as targets. "A taxation system for the 21st century has to built on what has value today, and that is data," Le Maire said. He added it is also a matter of fiscal justice, as the digital giants pay some 14 percentage points less tax than European small-and-medium sized companies.
The draft law will be presented to the cabinet on Wednesday, and then presented to France's parliament, Reuters reports.
"The tax would also target the sales of personal data for advertising purposes."
He said the tax would target some 30 companies, mostly American, but also Chinese, German, Spanish and British, as well as one French firm and several firms with French origins that have been bought by foreign companies. The paper listed Google, Amazon, Facebook and Apple (the four so-called "GAFA" companies) but also Uber, Airbnb, Booking and French online advertising specialist Criteo as targets. "A taxation system for the 21st century has to built on what has value today, and that is data," Le Maire said. He added it is also a matter of fiscal justice, as the digital giants pay some 14 percentage points less tax than European small-and-medium sized companies.
The draft law will be presented to the cabinet on Wednesday, and then presented to France's parliament, Reuters reports.
"The tax would also target the sales of personal data for advertising purposes."
All needed to be known (Score:5, Informative)
"He added it is also a matter of fiscal justice, as the digital giants pay some 14 percentage points less tax than European small-and-medium sized companies."
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Well, at least a majority of the electoral college. But he doesn't speak for me, and I haven't heard any public statement he's ever made that I agree with. So, as a part of the nation, he doesn't speak for me. What he legitimately speaks for is the power center of the country as represented by the executive branch of the US government. And a bunch of other people who, in my opinion, are either shy several bushels of brains, or are greedy bastards who don't care what happens to the country. (It's an or
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Re:Build that wall, sir. (Score:5, Insightful)
So you do not want that big companies pay taxes? Strange.
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Circus? It's more like a pantomime.
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Pantomime? This is more like a rollerblade.
Magic free money (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Magic free money (Score:5, Informative)
They won't because they can't. Here's an explainer, with TL;DR section.
https://www.cs.cmu.edu/~ref/ec... [cmu.edu]
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You can only "just raise prices" to whatever you want if you have a monopoly on a necessity.
If the digital giants have no competition for their respective products, it may not be a necessity, but it's pretty much a monopoly.
Re: Magic free money (Score:3, Insightful)
If they could raise prices 3% with no consequences, they would have already done it. That's a given. So no, they will not simply raise prices. It may change the optimal price/volume point, and so indirectly change prices (which could be up or down, if they want to claw back profits by volume, they may reduce prices).
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If they could raise prices 3% with no consequences, they would have already done it.
The reason they can't raise prices without consequences is because of a thing called "competition". Yes, the giants don't have much competition, but their current price points are where each can compete best against the other giants. If everyone in the market gets hit with a 3% tax they can all adjust prices up 3% without consequences.
But wait, what if one doesn't raise prices? Wouldn't that give them a competitive advantage? No, because if that was true they would already have cut their prices.
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However, there's a question as to whether the price increase would be enough to offset the network effects benefiting the "giants". For every environment there's an optimal size, and this might be sufficient to favor smaller companies. Perhaps. (That's not the way to bet...but it's a possibility.)
Re:Magic free money (Score:5, Insightful)
You fail to consider the market for FB services. It is not what the users are *paying*, it is what advertisers are. It is business oriented, so the elasticity of demand and the power to negotiate is significantly better than what a consumer has. So, believe me, nothing close to full passing of the tax is even close to happening. And since the amount is not even all that big, it ain't getting passed on the consumer at all.
Not to mention that if a service is a monopoly, then regulation should not be optional, but mandatory. Monopolies are always bad.
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Mod parent up. A combination of underrated, insightful, interesting, and informative.
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But from a profit perspective, it is usually preferable for the company to pass the tax on rather than simply eating it.
Their problem is they cannot do it, for reasons the explainer made clear, which shows that you have not read it.
The obvious example is if the seller currently only has a 2% profit margin, and you impose a 3% revenue tax on them. Obviously they're not going to eat the tax since that would mean they'll be losing money with each sale. The only way they can continue to sell and stay in busine
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The CBO produced a report "THE INCIDENCE OF THE CORPORATE INCOME TAX" in which it states
"A corporation may write its check to the Internal Revenue Service for payment of the corporate income tax, but that money must come from somewhere: from reduced returns to investors in the company, lower wages to its workers, or higher prices that consumers pay for the products the company produces."
And it goes on to say
"Although economists are far from a consensus about exactly who bears how much of the burden of the c
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One thing, however, is that you're considering all the corporations involved to be public goods. In France, at least, many consider foreign influences to be the opposite of a public good. And, personally, I consider Facebook to be such even without invoking national benefit.
So perhaps the point of this tax it to encourage local business to succeed. Doing it with a tax rather than as a tax-break will generally raise a lot less public opposition. And they may consider that if some of those "giants" just d
Re:Magic free money (Score:5, Funny)
I'm sure they won't just add that 3 % back to the costs of their services in France
So.....advertisers will pay more? Tell me, where is the drawback again?
Re:Magic free money (Score:4, Funny)
Because if adverts cost more then companies will be able to afford less, of course.
Hang on ...
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Well, hello back, yet another French corporation, subject to the same laws that other French corporations are subject to and not hiding revenue in Ireland.
splendid (Score:2)
Sounds like a splendid idea! Let France lead the way by laying a _heavy_ tax on data hoarders. The more data they hoard, and the more rapey their data collection scams, the higher their taxes!
Yup. (Score:2, Troll)
The real problem is that we are not taxing the Sales over the internet properly, combined with nations (such as Ireland) that does not charge corporate taxes. To be fair, I would rather that America moves to 0% tax if the company is here (and is doing the bulk of the work here), otherwise a simple 25% tax on them.
It is long past time for the west
Re:Yup. (Score:5, Informative)
Totally agree with you. (Score:2)
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5-10x what Europe fines European companies, when they do go after them
Could that be because foreign mega giants to 5-10x the amount of damage when they break the laws? Naah must be teh nationalism.
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massive penalties (5-10x what Europe fines European companies
Show some fucking evidence for your ignorant idiotic claims.
Yes, I do expect the evidence to include comparable levels of breaking the law.
Re: Yup. (Score:2)
here we see that Europe is going after Google for basically charging too little. [bloomberg.com]look, I believe in going after companies for monopolistic actions. To be honest, these companies need to be broken up. But, those
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So your example is a $130bn turnover company being fined - for a second time, because they're a multiple offender - 1/6 of their profit, compared to a drug company being fined 1/10 of their turnover?
You're not convincing me of shit.
I mean, you skipped entirely the 1bn EUR fine on Daimler, which was a mere 1/3 of their profit.
Maybe - just maybe - if the US companies obeyed the fucking law they wouldn't get fucking fined. Is that so fucking hard to fucking comprehend you American fucking idiot?
Less jobs, more tax burden (Score:2)
I am sorry to say this, but France is a champion of tax burden. Those gilets jaunes are a symptom this failure. I'll blame this lack of income on the rigid job creation/destruction over-regulation.
Fair, but... (Score:4, Interesting)
In all fairness, this should have nothing to do with the Internet giants. Given the massive degree of internationalization today, *all* companies should be taxed where they generate their revenue, rather than allowing stupid games with tax havens.
That said, what France is doing is borderline corrupt: targetting specific companies that (they think) represent untapped sources of sweet, sweet tax money. France is basically broke, attempts to further tax the populace led to the yellow-vests, and cutting bureaucracy or public services is politically impossible. They need more bread and circuses to stave off the collapse...
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Tax havens work precisely by allowing corporations to determine where their revenues are generated.
In simplest form, a company might manufacture their product at almost zero profit in China, sell to a subsiduary in Ireland, have that subsiduary mark the price up and sell on to a subsituary in the US, and then the US company sell the product retail at almost no profit. This the revenue is generated in a jurisdiction with favorable tax conditions - at least on paper.
You could try to stop that by charging tax
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There are plenty of ways around that too. Easiest one? Don't bring it in. If you have only a few shareholders, you can just keep it overseas. But, if you do want it back in the US... get a loan. A huge loan. Secured upon the money you are not bringing into the US. As you have perfectly secure collateral, in liquid assets no less, you can take out your huge loan with a very low interest rate. There will be some cost, of course, but less than if you were to pay tax. It does look a bit iffy in accounting havin
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Re:Fair, but... (Score:4, Insightful)
Nothing corrupt about noticing that a bunch of companies are all pulling the same tax-dodge and trying to do something about it.
revenue taxing - finally (Score:5, Insightful)
The key word is not "3%" nor is it "Internet giants" - the key word is revenue.
This is what should've happened a decade ago. Taxing revenue instead of profits puts a clean shot right between the eyes of the majority of tax evasion schemes. It's a step long overdue.
And before the typical neo-conservative trolls shout it down: Remember that everyone BUT corporations is taxed by revenue, not profits. My income tax is based on my income, not on what's left at the end of the month. And so is yours. If we can survive that type of taxation, so can multinational corporations.
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That's a false equivalence and it's amazing you found 4 idiots with mod points to support you.
You are claiming that personal taxes have no exemptions for costs. If you itemize you basically turn that income number into a profit number by removing your expenses (travel, tools, work materials, costs). If you rent your house or sell your guitar or anything you deduct the cost. Even if you can work from home and have zero costs whatsoever, meaning your income is 100% profit, you are still given a "standard de
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I can't deduct my rent. Maybe in your country you can. Over here, deductions are only possible for things directly related to your job, and a very small number of extras.
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What, no Standard Deduction or Itemized Deductions where you live? Which, at least theoretically (yah, it's been a very long time since any attempt was made to update those deductions) is meant to allow for the costs of actually, you know, living and paying your bills.
In other words, no you're taxed on income over and above cost of living (again, it's been a very long time since they adjusted the Standard Deductions and such to actu
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What, no Standard Deduction or Itemized Deductions where you live? Which, at least theoretically (yah, it's been a very long time since any attempt was made to update those deductions) is meant to allow for the costs of actually, you know, living and paying your bills.
In other words, no you're taxed on income over and above cost of living (again, it's been a very long time since they adjusted the Standard Deductions and such to actually match a "normal" cost of living for taxpayer and family) - in other words on profit....
By a "very long time" do you mean the 2017 tax legislation when the personal exemption was eliminated and the standard deduction nearly doubled? 2 years isn't a "very long time" when talking about tax policy, it is only 2 tax cycles for individuals. The change was passed in 2017 but it went into effect for the 2018 tax year so it's really only 1 year since the change happened. Prior to that, the standard deduction hadn't changed since 2017, when it went from $6,300 to $6,350. You have to dig REALLY deep
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Can't speak about your country, but mine is very, very, very far away from allowing actual cost of living to be deductible. The deductions include those expenses made in direct relation to the job, i.e. commuting costs, application costs for a new job and a small number of additionals.
Nowhere can I deduct my mortgage payment, my electricity bill or my food.
Comparing standard deductions with the profit-margin-only taxation of corporations is not a thing here. If you can deduct your mortgage, let me know, I m
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If we can survive that type of taxation, so can multinational corporations.
Yeah, they'll raise prices 3%. As long as it's an across-the-board tax there's no competitive advantage to not do so.
Congratulations, you just raised taxes on the middle class again - as always.
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Yeah, they'll raise prices 3%
Contrary to anything else that gives them an excuse to raise prices, this price raise at least will cycle around to the society. Also, a company that decides to absorb this tax without raising the prices - for example by not paying lawyers lots of money to come up with tax evasion schemes - will have a competitive advantage.
The whole point is that this is a tax that stays within the country where the business is made. Name one other way to ensure this.
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It's the surest way to kill companies.
[citation required]
Will Government chip in to cover costs when there is a loss on the books? No? Then why does it get to claim a piece of revenue when that loss happens?
Like I said: Income tax works that way. My income is taxed based on revenue. And no, if I can't make it and end the month spending more than I made, the government doesn't chip in.
Also: Yes, the government does regularily step in to prop up companies. It saved most of the banks during the financial crisis, it hands out subsidies to industries that are critical to society but not very profitable, it has a multitude of sponsorship and financial support programs running and many more ways in
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Here you go [taxfoundation.org]. Seriously, do you think it's a good idea to tax a company when they don't even make a profit? You're a new startup, you have $250,000 in expenses, you made $200,000 in revenue, meaning a gross loss of $50,000 (and an even greater net loss, most assuredly). AND you get to pay a nice tax on that $200,000 in revenue.
Your income tax is NOT based that way. You have deductions, don't you? If you have negative income throughout the year - you don't pay income taxes. If you earned $5,000 - well
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And before the typical neo-conservative trolls shout it down: Remember that everyone BUT corporations is taxed by revenue, not profits. My income tax is based on my income, not on what's left at the end of the month. And so is yours. If we can survive that type of taxation, so can multinational corporations.
Typical conservative troll here, lol (possibly paleo instead of neo though)
Several things to take issue with here.
Income isn't the only tax, for one thing, individual capital gains are taxed only on gain, for example. (I won't say profit, as I don't think you get to account for inflation.)
For another, it's questionable whether corporations should be taxed at all. Their employees are taxed on income, and their investors/owners are taxed on profits. Just how many places on this highway are you going to eng
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No-one is proposing a percent-for-percent changeover. That would be silly. Obviously a revenue tax would be at a much lower percentage than a corporation tax on profits - ideally so that the total amount taken would be the same. The post is just suggesting that a tax on revenue rather than profit may be more difficult to avoid through the use of underhanded but entirely legal accounting tricks.
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Also if you say there should be no taxes of any type... well, I hope you can afford a private security guard for your home, because you just laid off the entire police force. Better get some exercise too, because I don't know how long the roads are going to be viable with no maintenance and no-one footing the power bill for traffic signals. Sorry to puncture your libertarian bubble, but taxation is rather important for a functional society.
Can we have this in Germany too? (Score:2, Insightful)
Dear Government,
we all know that the big IT companies do not pay taxes in the EU, as some countries (e.g., Ireland, the Netherlands, Germany) do not really try to tax them, look the other way when they avoid taxes etc. I know that Germany is afraid someone (the US) could start taxing German cars, but:
(a) the car industry is only 4.5% of Germans GDP.
(b) they are ignoring modern trends for decades now, they had it coming and they need to change. The US taxing them could actually help.
(c) we can easily make up
Raise taxes but they won't pay (Score:3)
Google. etc don't pay taxes. That is what they do. Governments can raise taxes to 9,000% it doesn't matter to them they won't pay.
Groundhog Day (movie where day repeats over ...) (Score:3)
You jealous? (Score:5, Insightful)
The French have fast trains. The US does not.
The French have access to health insurance regardless of means -- if you lose your job and get sick, you won't end up deep in medical debt.
French universities are covered by the government, no need to save $200,000 in school funds starting when your kid is born.
What does the US have? Endless war, mass incarceration -- the money is used to do violence instead of helping fellow Americans.
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Re: You jealous? (Score:4, Funny)
The US has fast aircraft carriers. Any world government that is not concerned about us must be utter fools.
Some countries are inland, you know. ;-p
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I'm not going to look it up, but I bet they could reach Switzerland.
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The US has fast aircraft carriers. Any world government that is not concerned about us must be utter fools.
Hans...are we the baddies?
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Re:You jealous? (Score:5, Informative)
Not dramatically fast .... (Score:5, Informative)
Sure on my weekly trip to our HQ to Paris from Bordeaux (around 580km road distance), It takes 2 hours to get me at the center of Paris. "not dramatically fast compared to most other countries " you said ? Sure, let's see : Going from NYC to Pittsburgh that is around the same road distance of a Bordeaux-Paris, it will take you around 9 hours by train. Enjoy ! London to Glasgow, it's about 4 hours by train for around the same distance... Even with countries with fast trains you still get a major difference, Milano to Roma (573km) you will need around 3 hours ! 50% more .... sorry but I don't know in which planet (oops, country) you live in. If you wanted to bash TGV you could have gone for the comfort or the lack of connectivity on some east lines. But for the speed, the reliability or the price, no serriously get a clue.
Same thing about strike, lately train had more to suffer from impact of update of rail switches to full automatic that caused multiple black out at major paris station thant from any strikes. When there are major strikes, you know why trains are still ok in France ? Because, people will take the train to go to paris to have a huge demonstration ;-)
Nice French bashing and cliché combo attempt ;-)
Re:You jealous? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:You jealous? (Score:5, Informative)
The US wouldnt exist if it werent for the support of the French during your war of independence.
I think France has done more than enough for the US, you ungrateful prick.
Re:You jealous? (Score:5, Insightful)
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I'm pretty sure Meng Wanzhou disagrees with your viewpoint about free trade for the entire rest of the world. The US Navy is the sharp end of the US trade policy, not the world's.
Re:You jealous? (Score:5, Informative)
FWIW, the US was isolationist and largely pro-German during WWII until the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. Then we quickly changed our minds. France had little or nothing to do with our participation. Even Britain was a secondary consideration, and much of the populace was anti-British. (Much, not only those with Irish ancestors.) This was apparently because the Germans were openly racist, and the British much less so.
That said, there were prominent pro-British spokesmen (including FDR) as well as pro-Nazi (including Charles Lindberg). So isolationism was dominant. Until it wasn't practical any more.
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P. J. O'Rourke said something similar.
"Giving money and power to government is like giving whiskey and car keys to teenage boys."
He also said "The mystery of government is not how Washington works but how to make it stop."
Re:Cant innovate, lets tax (Score:5, Insightful)
France defaults to extra big taxation. Invest in France and enjoy that extra big tax. Who in France is getting all the new tax spending?
People who need healthcare, people who enjoy decent public transportation and high-speed trains, people who work to live and not live to work?
Re:Cant innovate, lets tax (Score:5, Informative)
Why the sudden need for more tax?
What services suddenly need extra tax money?
The French government deficit is projected to be 3.4% of GDP -- (By comparison, the US is projected to be 4.7% in 2019)
Most countries recognize that having ever climbing deficits is a bad thing. They can either cut expenses, or raise taxes to make up for the shortfall. The French government is choosing the latter, aimed specifically at huge corporations that historically haven't been paying their fair share. Note that it's only targeting a percentage of their profits realized within France. If Apple, Google, Facebook and the others don't like it, they can always choose not to do business in France.
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Most countries recognize that having ever climbing deficits is a bad thing.
I'm....not sure that's true. The only time anyone complains about deficits is when the other party wants to spend.
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I'm....not sure that's true. The only time anyone complains about deficits is when the other party wants to spend.
The fact that parties are inept at reducing spending (gotta give a tax cut to those voters), and the fact that they use it to attack the opposition spending, has nothing to do with the fact that people generally know that deficit in relation to GDP is a bad thing.
Don't underestimate the willingness for a politician to run a country knowingly into the ground for personal gain.
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Why can't the oh-so-smart Europeans build their own tech business to tax, instead of having to rely on US companies?
Are you suggesting that taxes should discriminate between companies based on their country of origin? What is this, protectionism?
so how come that in almost 30 years there is no euro search engine, hunh?
There's been several search engines in my country alone. I seriously doubt that in other EU countries, many of them larger, the situation is very different.
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France defaults to extra big taxation.
Funny how taxes are always huge, massive, unbearable no matter the actual number. 3% now. The same was said when someone proposed a 0.001% tax on stock exchange trades. Yes, that's a thousandth of one percent.
If you want a country with really high taxes, look to Switzerland. Last I checked (was there in summer last year), they were doing quite well for themselves. I seems - shocking, I know - that the fate of a country doesn't depend much on how it structures it taxes, but on how well it is run in total. Ta
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I happen to live in one of those neighbouring countries. Our taxes are lower.
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Is this a new purview of the French government, to dispense fiscal justice? I assume there will be no juries or trials, making the French fiscal justice system a dictatorship?
Every country on the planet creates their own tax laws, with their own arbitrary rules. Any company that chooses to operate in a country is obliged to follow those laws, for better or worse. If they don't like it, they are free to leave or stop doing business altogether. That's literally how it has always been, everywhere. This is nothing new.
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Americans were also invented by the English, so it's OK.
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s/who speak/who think they speak/
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One can say the same thing about the US.
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All colonials are vulgar, that's true. But the septics are mostly comprehensible.
Re:Europeans are poverty stuck, blind, & in de (Score:4, Insightful)
Riddle me this... the places in the US that pride themselves on "light regulations" also tend to have the highest incarceration rates. Whereas incarceration rates in Europe tend to be 1/3 to 1/4 of the US average with similar or lower violent crime rates. If the US puts so many people in prison (proportional to population), is it really so lightly regulated?
The difference is that Europe is somewhat more economically regulated than the US, but those regulations generally affect larger corporations, not the average citizen. The US is home of Draconian social regulations that put people in prison, ruin their lives with arrest records, etc and so forth.
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Riddle me this... the places in the US that pride themselves on "light regulations" also tend to have the highest incarceration rates. Whereas incarceration rates in Europe tend to be 1/3 to 1/4 of the US average with similar or lower violent crime rates. If the US puts so many people in prison (proportional to population), is it really so lightly regulated?
The difference is that Europe is somewhat more economically regulated than the US, but those regulations generally affect larger corporations, not the average citizen. The US is home of Draconian social regulations that put people in prison, ruin their lives with arrest records, etc and so forth.
Whilst that's a good point, the main reason that our prison populations are lower is because we haven't treated it as an industrial complex. Here on the other side of the pond prisons are still considered the property and responsibility of our respective governments.
There is also a lot more in the US you can go to jail for. If you get caught with drugs on the streets of Paris, Dortmund or Newcastle, you'll at worst get a fine. Possession alone is not a impressionable-able offence unless you've got enough
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Not always. It's only pre-tax if your employer pays for it, or if you're self-employed. If you're paid on W-2 and not offered insurance, you can't take the deduction if you buy your own insurance.
Also, I wasn't arguing pre-tax and post-tax status. I was saying that let's compare apples to apples. If most tax rates in Europe include health insurance coverage with low to no deductible, then let's add insurance premiums and deductibles to US tax rates to make the comparison 1:1. It's not only about the ta
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Out of the OECD-22 the US has:
-- the highest change of dying by age 60
-- the third highest functional illiteracy rate
-- the highest % of population in functional poverty (below 50% of median income)
Long-term unemployment is lowest, but if you're forced to work in a McJob, that's not actually great.
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