“Many nations and urban areas face the challenge of designing policies that ensure that the local population benefits from a potentially large influx of foreign residents”, reveals the study “Remote work, foreign residents and the future of global cities”, signed by João Guerreiro, Sérgio Rebelo, and Pedro Teles, and reported by Público.
According to economists, “restricting the purchase of properties by foreigners or imposing taxes on these purchases is not ideal.” To solve the problem, they propose an approach that “involves internalising externalities by implementing transfers to local individuals, based on their residential and professional locations”.
The researchers argue that new foreign residents represent capital gains – “which result from the sale of houses and land at higher prices to foreigners”; and simultaneously costs arising from the displacement of former residents to the outskirts, as well as the loss of authenticity in cities.
They believe, however, that these costs can be neutralised. One way to correct these adverse effects is to “subsidise former residents according to their location, counteracting relocation to the outskirts”, says João Guerreiro, speaking to the newspaper.
Furthermore, they defend direct taxation instead of increased taxation on the sale and purchase of houses.
“Policies that restrict the purchase of houses by new residents or that increase their taxes do not for allow taking advantage of the capital gains from the entry of these new residents and are, therefore, inefficient from the point of view of the country as a whole”, they emphasise.
Wow “involves internalising externalities by implementing transfers to local individuals". Impressive sentence
By Mimi from Beiras on 13 Sep 2023, 10:25
Do not bite the hand that feeds. Like it or not, Portugal is heavily reliant on foreigners, foriegn investment and tourism. Do not punish foreigners with higher taxes and costs. Step up as a government and build a range of affordable housing that only locals can buy or rent.
By Paolito from Algarve on 13 Sep 2023, 11:53
Foreign residents pay taxes, buy properties, furnish and repair properties, buy cars, groceries, and all the items people normally buy. Their contribution to the economy is substantial. Why use them as a scapegoat for the country's needs.
By Harriet from Porto on 13 Sep 2023, 13:25
What utter garbage. The increase in the cost of living was prompted by supply chain bottlenecks linked to COVID lockdowns and the onset of the Ukraine war. Foreigners arriving in and settling in Portugal are not responsible for higher inflation rates. The report seems to suggest anyone buying a house is contributing to their prices increasing, so needs to be punished! There are still enough houses left for locals to purchase, so foreigners, accounting for less than 10% of property sales in Portugal, are hardly restricting supply to locals.
By Billy Bissett from Porto on 13 Sep 2023, 17:24
Could you please proofread this a bit? I'd be interested in learning more about the report, but half of this article means nothing at all... I hope the report is more elucidating than "internalising externalities" and using foreigners as "capital gains"?
By Giorgio from Porto on 15 Sep 2023, 15:34
Portugal taxes are one of the highest in EU compare to the standard. Salaries are one of the lowest in EU. Healthcare system is not functioning and government closing urgency departments in Algarve. Shortage of medical staff. Rising taxes for foreigners will reflect really bad to the economy, the same happened in Spain already and the Spanish government is trying to find new options for digital nomads and golden visas. Don't blame foreigners for the corrupted actions of the government. UAE/Dubai and many others can offer better options with 0% taxes.
Don't kill the golden chicken, it is very easy to go to the downward spiral as many other EU countries.
By Franco from Algarve on 16 Sep 2023, 09:20