欧洲新封建主义:退出税如何将公民束缚于一个衰败的体制
European Neo-Feudalism: How Exit Taxes Chain Citizens To A Failing System

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/european-neo-feudalism-how-exit-taxes-chain-citizens-failing-system

## 欧盟外流:日益增长的趋势与惩罚性应对 大量欧盟公民——约140万人在2023年离开欧盟,其中包括26.5万德国人,寻求在瑞士、美国、卡塔尔和迪拜等地发展机会和更低的税收。这场“高绩效人才外流”——包括学者、企业家和高收入者——是由高税负(部分欧盟国家高达45%)以及对失控移民和繁重官僚主义等社会问题的担忧所驱动。 这种移民造成了巨大的经济损失,使欧盟国家损失了数十亿欧元的税收和资本。例如,一位学者在其一生中可能造成150万欧元的损失。 与其解决根本原因,许多欧盟国家正在实施“退出税”——对离境者征收的惩罚性税费,甚至包括未实现的资本收益。这种新封建主义的做法旨在通过经济手段阻止移民,反映了历史上对人员流动的限制。未来的计划,例如数字欧元,暗示了对资本控制的进一步收紧。最终,这一趋势凸显了对欧盟经济环境日益增长的不满,以及对其他地方更多个人自由和机会的偏好。

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原文

Submitted by Thomas Kolbe

More and more people are turning their backs on the European Union. With them, the states are also losing economic substance. Exit taxes are being used in an attempt to counter this.

The states of the European Union are experiencing a veritable exodus. About 1.4 million EU citizens left their home countries in 2023, among them 265,000 Germans. Among the favored destinations are, alongside Switzerland and the United States, booming regions such as Qatar or Dubai.

Good Reasons

The list of destination countries carries political dynamite, because it says much about the background of this flight movement. A growing number of high performers are trying to escape what is in many places almost predatory levels of taxation. In addition, academics, researchers, freelancers such as the so-called “digital nomads,” and entrepreneurs simply find better economic prospects elsewhere than in economically sedated Europe.

EU citizens are not infrequently being drained by a tax burden of 45 percent. We know this from Germany: it is not even necessary to count among the absolute top earners in order to have to surrender nearly half of one’s income to the tax authorities. Basically, it is a scandal—one about which there is no longer any open discussion.

In Dubai, for example, there is no income tax at all. In the United States, the state burdens its citizens with around 27 percent. Anyone who can calculate, who is well educated and mobile, draws the consequences. Alongside the tax burden, social crises increasingly come into play: uncontrolled migration, the decay of major cities, and the visibly hostile climate of ever-expanding bureaucracies. For many ambitious people, life in the EU’s Europe is simply too expensive, and the essence of bureaucracy too overbearing.

Expensive Emigration

Every emigrant leaves behind an economic gap in his homeland. When a German with a high income leaves the country, the state does not only lose a taxpayer—it loses his capital and know-how. Over the lifetime of an academic, around €1.5 million in taxes and social contributions escape the treasury. In addition, there is the enormous loss of capital. Estimates assume that the median wealth of Germans per person is €106,000. With the emigration of 265,000 Germans and the return of 191,000 persons—where for simplicity we assume the same level of wealth—about €7.8 billion in capital flows abroad.

The economist Bernd Raffelhüschen calculates the annual fiscal loss through emigration by discounting the difference between future tax and social contribution payments and state transfers of an average academic to its present value. He arrives at a loss of about €30,000 for each emigrated academic.

The flight of high performers works like economic erosion in real time. Highly qualified people leave the country. People who, with higher probability, would have moved venture capital and founded companies are tearing open a fiscal gap. About 56 percent of income tax revenue is provided by the top ten percent of taxpayers—the political class would be well advised to roll out the red carpet for these people instead of harnessing them to the cart of their ambitious social projects.

Feudalism as the Answer

The answer of EU Europe to the flight of the economically ambitious and wealthy is neo-feudal in character. Through punitive taxes, the costs of fleeing the tax collector and the increasingly invasive state are to be raised so high that the impulse to emigrate is suffocated. Somewhat exaggeratedly formulated, this policy recalls the old feudal European conditions which once led to the mass migration of Europeans to North America.

Alongside France, Spain, Italy, and the Netherlands, the Federal Republic of Germany has also deployed an exit tax.

Anyone who, as an entrepreneur, holds at least 1 percent of a corporation (this includes stock capital) and turns his back on Germany triggers exit taxation—even if no sales proceeds have been realized. In this case, the state assumes a fictitious sale of the shares and taxes the theoretical capital gain. What is decisive is the difference between the original purchase price and the current market value. Sixty percent of this gain is added to taxable income and taxed at up to 45 percent, depending on the income tax rate. In addition comes the solidarity surcharge and a possible church tax levy.

This regulation applies if the person concerned was subject to unlimited taxation in Germany for at least seven of the past twelve years—and it applies equally in the case of emigration to third countries or relocation within the EU. Since 2022, moves within the EU are no longer automatically privileged for tax purposes: whoever wants to leave must pay—unless he applies for a deferral over seven years and provides collateral. The frequently mentioned €150,000 threshold is not a tax-free allowance, but only a guideline for assessment.

In sum, this amounts to state access to future gains, binding entrepreneurs to their homeland and making departure more difficult through a fiscal hurdle.

Europe Will Rely on Capital Barriers

Up to now, exit taxation refers to corporate holdings and does not cover private individuals who want to emigrate with their capital. However, in view of the fiscal emergency of numerous EU states, we must assume that this will change in the medium term, and that other groups of persons will also be included in the scope of exit taxation.

That the states of the EU will in all probability rely on mobility barriers rather than reforming their expensive state apparatus shows the entire problem. People are literally voting with their feet against bureaucratism and the sprawling hyper-state.

The response is further barriers to capital, such as the planned digital euro. It would amount to an almost insurmountable capital barrier. And it would at the same time send the signal to worldwide capital to give the eurozone a wide berth.

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About the author: Thomas Kolbe, a German graduate economist, has worked for over 25 years as a journalist and media producer for clients from various industries and business associations. As a publicist, he focuses on economic processes and observes geopolitical events from the perspective of the capital markets. His publications follow a philosophy that focuses on the individual and their right to self-determination.

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