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French Finance
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10/05/2008, 17:16
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Sunday Driver

Joined on 07/10/2005
Deux Sevres (79)
Posts 3,011
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No, just the straight 11% social charge (the sum of CSG, CRDS and PS).
Edit:
PS: the social charge on the annutity income is based on the amount after the tax relief.
Quick example though the on-line calculator:
Two persons in tax foyer.
Annuity income declared 10,000€
Base for calculation of tax 7,000€ (revenu fiscale de reference)
Base for calculation of CSG/CRDS/PS is also 7,000€
CSG = 574€ CRDS = 35€ PS = 61€
Total = 770€ which equates to 11% of the 7,000€.....![Big Smile [:D]](/cs/images/emotions/biggrin.gif)
Waddya mean it's only Saturday......
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10/05/2008, 21:46
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BobDee

Joined on 17/08/2005
Reaup Lisse 47
Posts 118
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So the result from the calculator shows the tax payable (A) plus the Social Charges (B) payable, the sum of which (A+B) is your liability?
Viz:
Compte tenu des éléments que vous avez saisis, le montant de votre impôt net à payer s'élève à A (auquel il faudra ajouter B de contributions sociales supplémentaires)
If this is so, the overall tax payable amount seems quite a bit more than the UK figure.
BobD
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11/05/2008, 8:05
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BobDee

Joined on 17/08/2005
Reaup Lisse 47
Posts 118
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Thanks Ron for the clarification.
Have to say that the way the French Tax system treats savings interest has come as a bit of a shock. Working through the calculator the following results seem appropriate,
Situation: Married couple, both above normal retiremant age (65)
1) Having a joint pension of €20,000 Pay €136 Tax and no Social Charge.
2) Having a joint pension of €20,000 and an annuity of €5000 Pay €482 Tax plus €220 Social Charge
3) Having a joint pension of €20,000 and an Annuity of €5000 and bank savings interest of €10,000 pay €1968 Tax plus €1320 Social Charge.
Moral is, it seems, dont rely on that savings nest egg as an income source if you want to keep your tax bill low.
BobD
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11/05/2008, 9:05
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Ron Avery
Joined on 29/11/2004
Aveyron 12
Posts 3,288
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"Have to say that the way the French Tax system treats savings interest has come as a bit of a shock."
I think that statement is true for an awful lot of us coming from a culture of being enticed to and rewarded for saving. Its this penalisation of savings that tempts a few to all intents and purposes, honest and upright citizens, to conveniently forget their UK savings accounts and/or pay tax on them in the UK, hoping that they will never come to the notice of the French tax authorities, thereby avoiding paying sociale charges.
There have been many on here over the years who have said they been advised to do likewise by well meaning "friends", but in this age of information sharing I think the chances of avoiding detection reduce by the day and the longer the evasion, the stiffer the penalty .
Why not post a sensible answer, people will appreciate it more
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11/05/2008, 9:20
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spg
Joined on 23/08/2004
Southern Morbihan 56
Posts 1,140
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BobDee wrote: | |
Moral is, it seems, dont rely on that savings nest egg as an income source if you want to keep your tax bill low.
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Which is why many French invest in Assurance Vie (s) as early as they can afford to.
Sue
Computing - it's another world
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France Forum » Legal and Finan... » French Finance » Re: Social Charges
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