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How Europe is Designing a Tax System You Can't Escape

By The Economic Matrix

Summary

Topics Covered

  • Netherlands Taxes Unrealized Gains at 36%
  • Spain's Temporary Wealth Tax Becomes Permanent
  • Energy Taxes Extract €325 Billion Yearly
  • EU Demographics Demand Higher Wealth Taxes
  • EU Plots Direct Transnational Wealth Extraction

Full Transcript

This is the EU, an organization seen as one of the most successful in the world.

A system that attracted investments, talent, [music] and capital for decades.

But that is about to change. New tax

laws already passed by national parliaments could trigger a wave of capital flight [music] unlike anything the continent has seen since the Cold War. Here's how it works. You buy a

War. Here's how it works. You buy a vintage Porsche 911. You pay €80,000.

You park it in your garage. A year

passes. The market surges. Collectors

are now paying €120,000 for models like yours. Your car

appreciated €40,000, but you haven't sold it. You haven't

received a single euro. Then the tax bill arrives. The government has now

bill arrives. The government has now assessed your car's appreciation. You

owe €14,400 on the €40,000 gain. cash do now. You

don't have €14,400.

You used your savings to buy the car, so you sell. But the moment you list it,

you sell. But the moment you list it, the bubble bursts. The best offer you get is75,000, 5,000 less than you paid. You sold at a

loss to pay your tax on a gain that never existed. Starting January 2028,

never existed. Starting January 2028, the Netherlands will tax unrealized capital gains at 36%.

The Dutch House of Representatives passed the law in February 2026. The

Senate is expected to follow. This isn't

a theory. It's live legislation. And if

you think this stops at the Dutch border, you haven't been paying attention to how the EU operates. To

understand why Europe is crossing this line, we need to examine what's actually happening in the Netherlands. The

mechanism reveals the fiscal pressures every other EU nation is facing. The law

is called the actual return. In box 3 act, it imposes a flat 36% tax on all investment gains realized or not

starting January 2028. The Netherlands

divides personal income into three boxes. Box one covers employment income

boxes. Box one covers employment income and home ownership. Box two applies to substantial business interests, owning at least 5% of a company. Box three is

savings and investments. For decades,

Box 3 taxed a fictional return. The

government assumed your assets earned a certain [music] percentage, then taxed that assumed income, whether you made it or not. During years of near zero

or not. During years of near zero interest rates, savers were taxed on returns they never received. The Dutch

Supreme Court ruled this unconstitutional in 2021. The system

violated property rights under the European Convention on Human Rights. You

can't tax income that doesn't exist. The

government tried fixes. They adjusted

the assumed rates. They allowed

taxpayers to prove their actual [music] returns were lower. Nothing worked.

By 2024, the Treasury was losing 2.3 billion annually as investors successfully challenged their assessments. So, the government chose

assessments. So, the government chose the most aggressive option, tax actual returns, including unrealized gains. If

your portfolio rises by €10,000 over the course of the year, the tax authority treats that paper gain as taxable income. You owe €3,600.

income. You owe €3,600.

It doesn't matter if you've sold anything. It doesn't matter if the

anything. It doesn't matter if the assets are illquid. You must find €3,600 in cash. Real estate and startup shares

in cash. Real estate and startup shares are exempt. For those assets, the

are exempt. For those assets, the government adopted a capital gains approach. Tax only applies when you

approach. Tax only applies when you sell. The Treasury knows the system

sell. The Treasury knows the system created liquidity problems. They applied it anyway to liquid assets because they needed the revenue. The bill includes a

€1,800 tax-free annual return. Losses

above €500 can be carried forward indefinitely to offset future gains. But

these provisions don't solve the core issue. Several coalition members

issue. Several coalition members admitted this isn't their preferred approach, but the Supreme Court left them no choice. The old system was illegal. The new system generates

illegal. The new system generates revenue. The alternative was losing

revenue. The alternative was losing billions. Cointelegraph warned of

billions. Cointelegraph warned of capital flight. Crypto holders in

capital flight. Crypto holders in particular face a choice. Pay 36%

annually on paper gains or leave. The

Dutch didn't invent this desperation.

They're just the first to codify it. EU

nations don't innovate tax policy in isolation. They study each other's

isolation. They study each other's experiments, waiting to see which revenue extractions succeed without triggering mass immigration. Spain

offers the clearest precedent. In 2022,

the government introduced a temporary solidarity wealth tax on net worth above 3 million. Rates ranged from 1.7% to

3 million. Rates ranged from 1.7% to 3.5% depending on the region. The tax

was designed to fund pandemic recovery and was scheduled to expire after 2 years. It didn't expire. By 2024, the

years. It didn't expire. By 2024, the temporary measure became permanent. The

threshold dropped to €700,000 in some autonomous communities. What began as

autonomous communities. What began as emergency legislation is now embedded in the Spanish tax code. The consequences

were immediate. High earners relocated to Andor, a tiny principality in the Pyrenees with a 10% [music] flat tax.

Crypto traders moved to Dubai, where capital gains taxes don't exist. Digital

entrepreneurs shifted their tax residency to Portugal before that country closed its non-habitual resident loophole in [music] 2024. Spain didn't

gain revenue. It lost tax base, but the political narrative was successful and [music] finance ministers across Europe took notes. France operates a layered

took notes. France operates a layered extraction system. Capital gains face a

extraction system. Capital gains face a 30% flat tax, [music] but social charges push the effective rate to 47.2% for high earners. Real estate holdings above

high earners. Real estate holdings above €1.3 million face a 0.5% annual [music] wealth tax. The system extracts revenue

wealth tax. The system extracts revenue at every stage. When you earn, [music] when you hold, when you sell. Germany

has tightened inheritance tax [music] enforcement. Loopholes that allowed

enforcement. Loopholes that allowed family businesses to pass wealth across generations have been closed. Crossber

asset transfers face increased scrutiny.

The finance amp is tracking wealth flows more aggressively than at any point since reunification.

When one nation successfully implements a new revenue stream without triggering capital flight, others follow. The Dutch

experiment is being watched closely in Brussels, Paris, and Berlin. If the

Netherlands can tax unrealized gains at 36% and retain its tax base, the model spreads. But the most significant

spreads. But the most significant extraction mechanism isn't wealth [music] taxes, it's energy taxes. EU

revenue from CO2 related taxes tripled from 15 billion in 2017 to over€50 billion in 2023. [music]

Energy and transport taxes now represent 95% of all environmental tax revenue totaling €325 billion annually or 1.9%

of EU GDP. These taxes are framed as corporate [music] climate policy. The

reality is different. Households bear

44% of energy taxes, €15 billion annually. They pay 67% of transport

annually. They pay 67% of transport taxes, 43 billion. Germany's renewable

energy search charge, the EEG um [music] added €6.5 billion annually to household electricity bills before being partially reformed. Similar levies exist across

reformed. Similar levies exist across the EU. These aren't optional. You can't

the EU. These aren't optional. You can't

opt out of heating your home. You can't

avoid driving to work. The tax is embedded in the price of existence and it grows [music] with every new climate policy initiative. In 2023, Ursula

policy initiative. In 2023, Ursula Vondan referenced using private savings to fund EU [music] recovery financing.

The rhetoric is shifting from implicit to explicit. Your wealth is a resource

to explicit. Your wealth is a resource the state can access. The EU is also pushing regulatory harmonization. A

common consolidated corporate tax base proposal would eliminate tax competition between member states. The entire EU becomes one [music] giant tax trap. But

these aren't just opportunistic revenue grabs. [music] There's a structural

grabs. [music] There's a structural mechanism at work that makes rising taxes not just likely, but mathematically inevitable. The EU

mathematically inevitable. The EU working age population, those between 20 and 64, is projected to shrink by 35

million between 2020 and 2050. During

that same period, the 65 and over cohort will grow by 21 million. In 1990, there were roughly 4.5 working age Europeans

for every retiree. By 2050, that ratio falls to 1.7. [music]

Fewer taxpayers must fund the same welfare obligations. Pensions don't

welfare obligations. Pensions don't shrink because the population ages.

Health care costs don't decline because fewer people are working. The burden per worker increases. [music] EU member

worker increases. [music] EU member states collectively owe over 12 trillion in sovereign debt as interest rates normalized after 2022. Debt servicing

costs surged. Since 2000, the euro has approximately lost 30% of its purchasing power against a basket of goods.

Inflation erodess savings, but governments benefit. [music] Tax

governments benefit. [music] Tax brackets are calculated on nominal figures. As prices rise, nominal income

figures. As prices rise, nominal income rises, pushing taxpayers into higher brackets, even if their real purchasing [music] power hasn't increased. It's a

silent tax that requires no legislative vote. Walk into a supermarket in Rome or

vote. Walk into a supermarket in Rome or Berlin. In 2020, a liter of olive oil

Berlin. In 2020, a liter of olive oil cost €4. Today, it's €8. A loaf of bread

cost €4. Today, it's €8. A loaf of bread was €1.50. Now, it's €280. Your monthly

was €1.50. Now, it's €280. Your monthly

electricity bill was €80. Now it's €140.

Although our salary increased 8% over 4 years, your costs increased 40%. And the

government taxes you on the 8% nominal gain, not the 32% real loss. You're

getting poorer but paying more in taxes.

That's the mechanism. Governments face a fiscal constraint. They can't cut

fiscal constraint. They can't cut spending without triggering political backlash. Pensions, healthcare, and

backlash. Pensions, healthcare, and public sector wages are protected.

[music] They can't print money freely.

The European Central Bank constrains monetary policy to prevent runaway inflation. They can't raise [music]

inflation. They can't raise [music] traditional income taxes much higher without triggering immigration or underground economic activity. When you

can't tax income harder without killing economic activity, you tax accumulated wealth. It's the only remaining

wealth. It's the only remaining reservoir of untapped revenue. The cycle

reinforces itself. Higher taxes lead to slower growth. Slower growth reduces tax

slower growth. Slower growth reduces tax revenues. Lower revenues create pressure

revenues. Lower revenues create pressure for even higher taxes. Capital flight

shrinks the tax base further. The

remaining taxpayers face even higher rates to cover the shortfall. Historical

precedents exist. The UK imposed a 98% top marginal tax rate in the 1970s. It

didn't solve the debt crisis. It

triggered brain drain and capital exodus. Thatcher reversed course, but

exodus. Thatcher reversed course, but only after a decade of economic stagnation. Today's EU has fewer exit

stagnation. Today's EU has fewer exit options. The OECD's base erosion and

options. The OECD's base erosion and profit shifting framework coordinates tax policy across borders. The common

reporting standard shares financial information between countries. FATCA

extends US tax reach globally. Tax

havens are being systematically eliminated through international agreements. The Dutch unrealized gains

agreements. The Dutch unrealized gains tax isn't a radical policy. It's the

logical endpoint of a system running out of options. When the tax base is

of options. When the tax base is shrinking, the debt is growing and the currency is weakening. The money has to come from somewhere. The answer to that question is already being telegraphed by

the EU's leadership. Return to Ursula Fondonderan's statement about using [music] private savings to fund EU recovery. It wasn't a slip of the

recovery. It wasn't a slip of the tongue. It was a policy signal. The

tongue. It was a policy signal. The

endgame [music] isn't just national wealth taxes. It's transnational wealth

wealth taxes. It's transnational wealth extraction. Taxation [music] coordinated

extraction. Taxation [music] coordinated at the EU level, not just within individual member states. Spain

demonstrated the mechanism at [music] the national level. A temporary

solidarity levy becomes permanent. The

threshold drops, the rates rise, but the structural shift is moving from national extraction to EU level revenue collection. The EU has committed to net

collection. The EU has committed to net zero emissions by 2050. CO2 related

taxes have already tripled in 6 years from 15 billion to50 billion. They will

double again by 2030. Households will

bear the majority of the increase despite having the least ability to avoid consumption. Energy and transport

avoid consumption. Energy and transport taxes function as flat consumption levies. They hit those who can't afford

levies. They hit those who can't afford electric vehicles or home solar installations the hardest. The wealthy

optimize around them. The middle class pays the climate bill. New EU building efficiency directives make this pressure worse. Starting in 2030, existing homes

worse. Starting in 2030, existing homes must meet stricter energy performance standards. If your apartment or house

standards. If your apartment or house doesn't comply, you're required to retrofit. The average cost for a

retrofit. The average cost for a mandated heat pump installation in an older building is €15,000 to €30,000.

Add installation upgrades, new windows, and solar panel requirements, and you're looking at €50,000 or more. If you can't afford it, you can't legally rent or sell your property. You're holding a

depreciating asset that costs a fortune to bring up to code. This isn't a tax on the wealthy. It's a wealth transfer from

the wealthy. It's a wealth transfer from homeowners to green energy contractors, [music] mandated by Brussels, funded by your savings. But the most significant shift

savings. But the most significant shift isn't happening at the national level.

It's happening in Brussels. The EU is moving beyond national contributions to direct EU level taxation. Proposed own

resources include 30% of emissions trading revenue, 75% of carbon border adjustment proceeds, and new levies on corporate profits, [music] digital services, and financial transactions.

Citizens would be taxed by their national government and directly by Brussels to service the €750 billion in joint CO9 recovery debt. What began as

temporary emergency borrowing is becoming permanent fiscal integration.

Unlike national parliaments where voters can reject tax increases or vote out governments, EU's own resources are negotiated by the council and commission. There's minimal democratic

commission. There's minimal democratic oversight. You can't vote out the tax

oversight. You can't vote out the tax collectors. The Dutch aren't radical.

collectors. The Dutch aren't radical.

[music] They're just early. Europe is

taxing money people never received because it has no other choice. The

convergence is complete. Shrinking

populations, rising [music] debt, weakening currency, and political constraints create one outcome: inevitable wealth extraction. How long

before the Dutch model becomes the EU standard? How long before unrealized

standard? How long before unrealized gains taxes spread from Amsterdam to Athens? The tax you can't escape isn't

Athens? The tax you can't escape isn't the one on your paycheck. It's the one on assets you're still holding, waiting for a better time to sell that may never come.

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