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Why does Japan's salary income deduction mean employment tax starts from a statutory formula instead of your raw gross pay?
Employees in Japan often look at gross salary and assume tax must simply follow that number downward after a few personal deductions. Please explain why the salary income deduction changes the starting point first, and why this is not the same thing as claiming your real work costs receipt by receipt.
Related Questions
Why does Singapore's Auto-Inclusion Scheme matter to employers even though employees love the convenience more?
Employees like seeing pre-filled employment income in Singapore, but employers sometimes treat the Auto-Inclusion Scheme as routine payroll admin. Please explain why AIS matters on the employer side and why the deadline discipline is part of the tax system, not just a data upload chore.
Why does the UK's company car benefit so often feel worse than the employee expected?
I am being offered a company car in the UK and the deal sounds attractive at first glance. Please explain why the eventual tax hit can still surprise employees, and why people who focus only on lease cost or the monthly payroll impact often miss the real calculation.
Why does a UK tax code feel like a verdict on your salary when it is really just HMRC's current payroll instruction?
My payslip tax code changes and everyone around me suddenly starts speaking as if HMRC has made a final judgment on my tax life. Please explain why a UK tax code matters, why it can still be provisional or incomplete, and why people should not read it like a one-line annual tax assessment.
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