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Quote from: Zero Talent on June 27, 2015, 15:32Quote from: StockPhotosArt on June 27, 2015, 14:35Quote from: spike on June 27, 2015, 13:22..and all somebody has to do is link the median wage instead of the average...here: http://www.wikiwand.com/en/List_of_European_countries_by_median_wageThose values are GROSS income. In Portugal, after the huge taxes (among the highest in Europe) the NET income drops considerably and those 694€ will fall to under 600€. And if you consider we pay some of the highest prices for energy, fuel and everything else there's not much money left for anything.Here is your net income. There are 10 EU countries behind Portugal and Greece!Portugal has 8177/12 = 681/month NETThere is something very wrong with those informations. One says the Gross income for Portugal is 694€, and the other says that the Net is 681€. I can assure you that a worker in Portugal does not pay only 13€ of taxes over income and Social Security. Social Security alone, for workers working to an employer is 11% (employer pays another +-23% for each worker), which roughly reduces 70€ over the mentioned Gross 694€ sending the salary under the 600€. But then you still have to cut the tax over the income.You also say that there are other countries with a wider gap between min and max wages. According to data, only Latvia has a bigger gap. Portugal is in the second place equal to Romania and Bulgaria.And if you consider that the extra hours are in most cases not paid, and you do it for free if you want to keep the job, and that this one is extremely precarious putting the worker at the mercy of the employer, the salary is in fact much lower since you should be earning more for the work you do.
Quote from: StockPhotosArt on June 27, 2015, 14:35Quote from: spike on June 27, 2015, 13:22..and all somebody has to do is link the median wage instead of the average...here: http://www.wikiwand.com/en/List_of_European_countries_by_median_wageThose values are GROSS income. In Portugal, after the huge taxes (among the highest in Europe) the NET income drops considerably and those 694€ will fall to under 600€. And if you consider we pay some of the highest prices for energy, fuel and everything else there's not much money left for anything.Here is your net income. There are 10 EU countries behind Portugal and Greece!Portugal has 8177/12 = 681/month NET
Quote from: spike on June 27, 2015, 13:22..and all somebody has to do is link the median wage instead of the average...here: http://www.wikiwand.com/en/List_of_European_countries_by_median_wageThose values are GROSS income. In Portugal, after the huge taxes (among the highest in Europe) the NET income drops considerably and those 694€ will fall to under 600€. And if you consider we pay some of the highest prices for energy, fuel and everything else there's not much money left for anything.
..and all somebody has to do is link the median wage instead of the average...here: http://www.wikiwand.com/en/List_of_European_countries_by_median_wage
Quote from: StockPhotosArt on June 27, 2015, 17:02Quote from: Zero Talent on June 27, 2015, 15:32Quote from: StockPhotosArt on June 27, 2015, 14:35Quote from: spike on June 27, 2015, 13:22..and all somebody has to do is link the median wage instead of the average...here: http://www.wikiwand.com/en/List_of_European_countries_by_median_wageThose values are GROSS income. In Portugal, after the huge taxes (among the highest in Europe) the NET income drops considerably and those 694€ will fall to under 600€. And if you consider we pay some of the highest prices for energy, fuel and everything else there's not much money left for anything.Here is your net income. There are 10 EU countries behind Portugal and Greece!Portugal has 8177/12 = 681/month NETThere is something very wrong with those informations. One says the Gross income for Portugal is 694€, and the other says that the Net is 681€. I can assure you that a worker in Portugal does not pay only 13€ of taxes over income and Social Security. Social Security alone, for workers working to an employer is 11% (employer pays another +-23% for each worker), which roughly reduces 70€ over the mentioned Gross 694€ sending the salary under the 600€. But then you still have to cut the tax over the income.You also say that there are other countries with a wider gap between min and max wages. According to data, only Latvia has a bigger gap. Portugal is in the second place equal to Romania and Bulgaria.And if you consider that the extra hours are in most cases not paid, and you do it for free if you want to keep the job, and that this one is extremely precarious putting the worker at the mercy of the employer, the salary is in fact much lower since you should be earning more for the work you do.I tend to believe Eurostat numbers a little more than some "wikiland" numbers.Anyway, the topic is not about Portugal, but about Greeks, living on borrowed money, way above their possibilities.FYI, Portugal's national debt is 130% vs Greece 179% GDP. Portugal might still have a chance to avoid the a "Greek crisis", if the Portuguese people will elect and keep in power fiscally responsible politicians, instead of populist gamblers like Tsipras.Since you mentioned it, I am not aware of any debt bailout requested by Romanians, Bulgarians, etc despite living much harsher lives than the Greeks! And Romania has a national debt of only 38% for a net income of 172 euros/month.And Bulgaria even 19% for a median net income of 243 euros/month!And more or less, the same goes for all the other 10 countries having a lower standard of life than Greece or Portugal. All of them are much more fiscally responsible!What about that?
Quote from: Lizard on June 27, 2015, 19:21The EU membership is the best thing that happened to these countries.Politicians cannot change the laws to suit themselves and steal with impunity, anymore. They must adhere to the rigors of the EU club.Some of them would love to go back to the "free-for-all" theft and corruption frenzy from the post-communist years. Some of them would love to buy for themselves and for peanuts, the telecom, energy or banking industries, you seem to worry so much about. And they would love to prevent all external competition.This is why they do their best to play the nationalistic card, blaming EU for making life harder for everybody, when in fact it is harder for them to steal, in the name of the "national interest"
Quote from: Lizard on June 27, 2015, 21:56You contradict yourself.You admit that your politicians stole and enriched themselves during the pre-EU years. Now, when EU tries to stop the corruption, theft and economical malpractice by asking for good governance principles and practices (as they tried with Greece, to stay on topic), you consider this the "worst thing that ever happened"Obviously, for some reason, you either prefer the lawless, anarchic, post-communist years, or, you are nostalgic about the "glorious" communist period.
OK, John Lennon, peace Sent from my SM-N910T using Tapatalk
I tend to believe Eurostat numbers a little more than some "wikiland" numbers.Anyway, the topic is not about Portugal, but about Greeks, living on borrowed money, way above their possibilities.FYI, Portugal's national debt is 130% vs Greece 179% GDP. Portugal might still have a chance to avoid the a "Greek crisis", if the Portuguese people will elect and keep in power fiscally responsible politicians, instead of populist gamblers like Tsipras.Since you mentioned it, I am not aware of any debt bailout requested by Romanians, Bulgarians, etc despite living much harsher lives than the Greeks! And Romania has a national debt of only 38% for a net income of 172 euros/month.And Bulgaria even 19% for a median net income of 243 euros/month!And more or less, the same goes for all the other 10 countries having a lower standard of life than Greece or Portugal. All of them are much more fiscally responsible!What about that?
FYI, Portugal's national debt is 130% vs Greece 179% GDP. Portugal might still have a chance to avoid the a "Greek crisis", if the Portuguese people will elect and keep in power fiscally responsible politicians, instead of populist gamblers like Tsipras.
What bothers me is the European people being brainwashed against the simple portuguese citizen, like we're living luxurious lifes, in a pre-racist attitude.
4 - people living in greece, portugal, etc ... should just plan to migrate elsewhere as soon as possible, the world is so big, plenty of better places both in the West and the East ... the EU can scr-ew us only as long as we live there, just leave for greener pastures and don't look back.
Is this a success? When hundreds of thousands of portuguese have now emigrated, especially the highly-qualified ones? Then you have the government saying that the economy is recovering and that the unemployment is starting to drop. Sure, if unemployed people leave to foreign countries in droves, unemployment drops. Yet the truth is that there aren't more jobs, and in fact they are shrinking.
Especially when you know how business is done outside of Europe, how salaries can be higher in so called third world countries then in a bunch of EU countries, when you see how easy a startup can emerge in HK whilst e.g. the Czech Republic is killing every Entrepreneur without a expensive and complicated legal entity with fraudulent and ridiculous taxes and social security obligation (fraudulent because the state offers almost nothing in return) then you wonder how long the EU can survive as a legal framework in a world which is every year more populated and competitive.
Quote from: Titus Livius on June 28, 2015, 03:014 - people living in greece, portugal, etc ... should just plan to migrate elsewhere as soon as possible, the world is so big, plenty of better places both in the West and the East ... the EU can scr-ew us only as long as we live there, just leave for greener pastures and don't look back.... true - so called free world is now outside the borders of EU and USA...
... true - so called free world is now outside the borders of EU and USA...
The countries are not being punished. They are being bailed out at a cost.
Left behind are the old, the unskilled and the unemployable. Who is going to pay for their upkeep? And what sort of country will you rebuild on these foundations?
Corrupt bunch and they need to get sorted out.