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Poland scraps income tax for an entire generation to reverse brain drain and entice its workers back
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Thread: Poland scraps income tax for an entire generation to reverse brain drain and entice its workers back

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    Default Poland scraps income tax for an entire generation to reverse brain drain and entice its workers back

    Poland scraps income tax for an entire generation to reverse brain drain and entice its workers back home
    Nearly two million Poles in the country will reap the rewards of the new scheme
    The tax break is intended to lure back skilled Polish workers who emigrated
    Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki believes the scheme will stop 'further loss'
    By GEORGE MARTIN FOR MAILONLINE

    PUBLISHED: 22:19 BST, 1 August 2019

    Poland on Thursday scrapped its personal income tax for young employees earning less than $22,000 a year, as part of a drive to reverse a brain drain and demographic decline that's dimming the prospects of a country that is otherwise experiencing strong economic growth.

    A new law by the right-wing government took effect Thursday, slashing the personal income tax from 18 percent to zero for workers under the age of 26 below the income threshold.

    It is expected to boost the earnings of nearly two million Poles at home, and the government hopes it will also persuade young Poles working abroad to return home.

    Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki recently said he hoped it would 'prevent a further loss, a bleeding of the population that is especially painful for a nation, a society, when it concerns the young generation.'


    Prime Minister of Poland, Mateusz Morawiecki 'said he hoped it would 'prevent a further loss, a bleeding of the population'

    But there were strong doubts if the tax relief would stop the drain of talented and educated young Poles to London, Berlin and other cities that offer higher wages and other opportunities.

    'I do not think it would stop me and my peers from leaving,' said Paulina Rokicka, a 19-year-old in Warsaw who works part-time at a TV station. 'It seems to me that we will want to leave (anyway) because there are better perspectives abroad than in Poland.'

    Introduced ahead of fall parliamentary elections, the exemption is part of a larger package of social benefits that has earned the government strong voter support but raised worries about strains on state finances.

    They include cash bonuses to families with children and a one-off payment to pensioners.

    Morawiecki said that some 1.5 million Poles, a number comparable to the population of Warsaw, have emigrated since the nation of 38 million joined the European Union in 2004.

    Some other estimates have put that number at 2 million but it is hard to pin down exactly due to the large number of those who go back and forth.

    While wages still are far lower than in the West, Poland's economy is growing at around 4.5% and unemployment had dipped below 6%. In order to fill labor shortages companies have turned to hiring migrants, mostly Ukrainians, some 2 million of whom are estimated to be working in Poland.

    The government says it is focusing on innovation where young inventive minds are highly valued.


    The program will cost the budget some 2 billion zlotys ($519 million) a year, according to the government

    Morawiecki recently urged a gathering of young people to 'stay here, to take your future in your own hands and be enterprising.'

    The government estimates the program will cost the budget some 2 billion zlotys ($519 million) a year.

    Pawel Jurek, the Finance Ministry spokesman, told The Associated Press on Thursday that young Poles will now have more money left in their bank accounts to allow them to start families earlier.

    But he said the most important aim is to keep professionals in the country.

    Maciej Biernacki, another young employee in Warsaw, also voiced doubts that the tax relief would sway many people, calling it only 'one small' element that would be considered in people's life decisions.

    More important, he said, are issues like business predictability and how the country is run.

    'I doubt that this kind of exemption would make anyone stay here in the country if he hesitates about whether to leave or stay,' the 25-year-old public relations manager told the AP.

    A recent survey by the National Bank of Poland showed that some 15 percent of Polish emigres would be willing to return home, especially from Britain, where the prospect of a hard Brexit threatens economic pain.

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...eneration.html

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    Time will tell. But I’m afraid that the wage difference would still be way too high for preventing any significant number of Poles from emigrating, if they’d have done that otherwise. Also, there are many foreign workers in Poland which are going to profit from that at the expense of Poles.

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