Friday, October 05, 2012

A Looming Tax Revolt? Protesting French Entrepreneurs Goes Viral

Because government holds the badges and guns, they haughtily presume of the complete subjugation of their subjects. They fail to realize that as humans, their constituents will respond to policies based on the latter’s self-interests—which could mean either life or death.

In France, the class warfare policies of President Francois Hollande has compelled entrepreneurs to bond together to demonstrate or protest on the highly repressive tax regime being rammed down their throats. 

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The French entrepreneur’s grievances has gone viral (above logo is from their Facebook page) 

From Bloomberg,
French entrepreneurs have a new mascot -- the pigeon.

Using the bird’s role in French slang as the “sucker,” owners of startups have formed a group dubbed “Les Pigeons” to show that President Francois Hollande’s new taxes make them the fall guys for France’s economic woes. They are protesting the almost doubling of the tax rate on capital gains generated from selling a business in Hollande’s budget for 2013.

The group has gathered more than 34,000 supporters in less than six days on Facebook Inc.’s social network and spurred more than 3,600 posts under the “#geonpi” tag on Twitter, with the founders of Iliad SA (ILD), Vente-Privee and Meetic SA (MEET) throwing in their voices of support.

“The government thinks France’s entrepreneurs are pigeons,” the movement’s initiators wrote on a dedicated Facebook page. “Anti-economic policies are crushing the entrepreneurial spirit and exposing France to a big risk.”

Entrepreneurs have for months called on France’s government to avoid slapping them with more taxes, saying it will dry up interest in creating new companies or drive startups away.

Socialist President Hollande, seeking to appease his base in his first annual budget last week, raised taxes on the rich and big companies and included a minimum of spending cuts to reduce the deficit. The government introduced a 75 percent tax for income above 1 million euros ($1.29 million).
Class warfare policies foster social divisions. This means that if the French government will remain recalcitrant in the pursuit of harsh socialist redistributionist policies, untoward consequences or the risks of capital flight,  tax revolt and or civil unrest rises. 

Moreover, by assailing the productive tax paying class, French fiscal position will likely worsen thus the likelihood of bringing down the entire euro project with it.

So instead of attaining “social justice”, class warfare policies will only lead to greater risks of intensifying the current crisis, a violent outcome and social instability.

Again politicians and their sycophants never learn.

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