Carlos Tevez (9 Viewers)

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Jem83

maitre'd at Canal Bar
Nov 7, 2005
22,870
43%

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So, it's actually easier....
It's 50 %, trust me. I had tax law last year, and we did comparative studies. Italy is one of the hardest taxing countries, and depending on income (and if you're wealthy), it will rise to 50 %.

The starting point of the taxes is around 43 %, but that's irrelevant when you're talking about wages as high as this.
 

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ZoSo

Senior Member
Jul 11, 2011
41,656
It's 50 %, trust me. I had tax law last year, and we did comparative studies. Italy is one of the hardest taxing countries, and depending on income (and if you're wealthy), it will rise to 50 %.

The starting point of the taxes is around 43 %, but that's irrelevant when you're talking about wages as high as this.

Tax (%) Tax Base (EUR)
23% 0 - 15,000
27% 15,001-28,000
38% 28,001-55,00
41% 55,001-75,000
43% 75,001 and over

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http://www.worldwide-tax.com/italy/italy_tax.asp
 

Jem83

maitre'd at Canal Bar
Nov 7, 2005
22,870
I went into my bookshelf right now and pulled out the books from last year. I remembered there was a country where taxes could rise as high as 50 %, and I had it in my mind it was Italy. I was so dead certain. Sorry ID and Salv, you guys are absolutely right, Italian tax stops at around 43 %.

I'm shocked to see now that the country where taxes could rise to almost as high as 50 % is Denmark! :lol2:

Which is great (@Nzoric , @Völler, @Søren Kraurup, @Adonis), but quite a different topic.

It's been some time since I saw these numbers, so I switched up the 2 countries. My apologies :hi:

I was dead certain it was Italy, oh well :rolleyes:
 

baggio

Senior Member
Jun 3, 2003
19,250
Fuck taxes, man.

Yea!

Tevez>Taxez :D

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I went into my bookshelf right now and pulled out the books from last year. I remembered there was a country where taxes could rise as high as 50 %, and I had it in my mind it was Italy. I was so dead certain. Sorry ID and Salv, you guys are absolutely right, Italian tax stops at around 43 %.

I'm shocked to see now that the country where taxes could rise to almost as high as 50 % is Denmark! :lol2:

Which is great (@Nzoric , @Völler, @Søren Kraurup, @Adonis), but quite a different topic.

It's been some time since I saw these numbers, so I switched up the 2 countries. My apologies :hi:

I was dead certain it was Italy, oh well :rolleyes:
No worries J man. Still love you. :)
 

Jem83

maitre'd at Canal Bar
Nov 7, 2005
22,870
Apology accepted :D

So thus less excuses if Marotta fails to sign a top player? ;)
Well, 43 % is easier to cope with, definitely. A 7 million net salary, I still believe would be out of the question. But maybe we could pull 5-6 million? It's still a lot, but I don't believe we're going to Madrid or Manchester just to go window-shopping. I agree with Suns, if you say you're after a top player, you have to be somewhat willing to pay the price.

That's one aspect, though. It's pretty evident that Arsenal can offer more wages than we can, so I wouldn't blame it on Marotta if Higuain ended up in London.
 
May 22, 2007
37,256
I went into my bookshelf right now and pulled out the books from last year. I remembered there was a country where taxes could rise as high as 50 %, and I had it in my mind it was Italy. I was so dead certain. Sorry ID and Salv, you guys are absolutely right, Italian tax stops at around 43 %.
You got me searching for it too, and I was also fairly confident :D

You're still right in saying wages are a big obstacle for Italian clubs here, I think Juve could match what they were paying Buffon before they gave him a renewal (€6m I believe). Dumping Iaquinta will be fun for the club.
 

Jem83

maitre'd at Canal Bar
Nov 7, 2005
22,870
Note: An additional 3% solidarity tax is imposed on all personal income exceeding EUR 300,000.

Does it simply add up to 46% for income over 300,000€?
It would appear so. Solidarity taxes are typical for countries in financial crisis, which Italy is experiencing at the moment. But I'm not sure which stage this particular tax is in, at the moment. I'd have to read up on it. The question is whether or not it has been implemented on a general basis (made into national italian tax law) or if it's in the entry-phase. If it's the former, then yes, we are slowly and steadily approaching the number that my earlier brainfart suggested :D

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You got me searching for it too, and I was also fairly confident :D

You're still right in saying wages are a big obstacle for Italian clubs here, I think Juve could match what they were paying Buffon before they gave him a renewal (€6m I believe). Dumping Iaquinta will be fun for the club.
Agreed. I think 6 million per season would be the absolute maximum we could handle. Still, it just might be enough to get Tevez. If he turns it down, though, for some oil club's 9 million, Marotta should be off the hook.
 

Völler

Always spot on
May 6, 2012
23,091
I went into my bookshelf right now and pulled out the books from last year. I remembered there was a country where taxes could rise as high as 50 %, and I had it in my mind it was Italy. I was so dead certain. Sorry ID and Salv, you guys are absolutely right, Italian tax stops at around 43 %.

I'm shocked to see now that the country where taxes could rise to almost as high as 50 % is Denmark! :lol2:

Which is great (@Nzoric , @Völler, @Søren Kraurup, @Adonis), but quite a different topic.

It's been some time since I saw these numbers, so I switched up the 2 countries. My apologies :hi:

I was dead certain it was Italy, oh well :rolleyes:
Lol, wtf. You are from Norway? It's almost exactly the same there.
 

ZoSo

Senior Member
Jul 11, 2011
41,656
You got me searching for it too, and I was also fairly confident :D

You're still right in saying wages are a big obstacle for Italian clubs here, I think Juve could match what they were paying Buffon before they gave him a renewal (€6m I believe). Dumping Iaquinta will be fun for the club.
€4.3m Iaquinta
€2m Bendtner
€1.5m Anelka

= ~€8m per year extra just from losing those players (after tax)
 

Hængebøffer

Senior Member
Jun 4, 2009
25,185
I went into my bookshelf right now and pulled out the books from last year. I remembered there was a country where taxes could rise as high as 50 %, and I had it in my mind it was Italy. I was so dead certain. Sorry ID and Salv, you guys are absolutely right, Italian tax stops at around 43 %.

I'm shocked to see now that the country where taxes could rise to almost as high as 50 % is Denmark! :lol2:

Which is great (@Nzoric , @Völler, @Søren Kraurup, @Adonis), but quite a different topic.

It's been some time since I saw these numbers, so I switched up the 2 countries. My apologies :hi:

I was dead certain it was Italy, oh well :rolleyes:
It can be higher. The tax in Britain is lower than in Italy, which is why a person like Valentino Rossi lives in England.
 

Dostoevsky

Tzu
Administrator
May 27, 2007
88,978
His wages are 5m a year. If you can't pay that to a player of Tevez skill then you have no business in signing top players.
5mln would be fine, but I was thinking about those 8mln he earns at City.

Anyway, I never said I'd skip on him. It's Tevez... it would be retarded not to buy him if possible, he's a brilliant player.
 
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