Dutch taxman hunting prostitutes

Dutch taxman hunting prostitutes

AMSTERDAM – Workers in the world’s oldest profession are about to get a lesson in the harsh reality of Europe’s new age of austerity.

The Dutch government has warned prostitutes who advertise their wares in the famed windows of Amsterdam’s red light district to expect a business-only visit from the taxman.Prostitution has flourished in Amsterdam since the 1600s, when the Netherlands was a major naval power and sailors swaggered into the port looking for a good time. The country legalised the practice a decade ago, but authorities are only now getting around to looking to sex workers for taxes.’We began at the larger places, the brothels, so now we’re moving on to the window landlords and ‘the ladies,” said Janneke Verheggen, spokeswoman for the country’s Tax Service.The move is meeting with little formal opposition, even among prostitutes – though some are sceptical it can be enforced. But it marks yet another shift away from the permissive attitudes that once prevailed in the Netherlands.’It’s a good thing that they’re doing this,’ said Samantha, a statuesque blond Dutchwoman in a white leather dress who offers her services from behind one of the hundreds of red-curtained windows in the heart of the city’s ancient centre.’It’s a job like any other and we should pay taxes,’ she said.She said she has been paying her share for years and felt she was competing on unequal terms with women who didn’t, many of them immigrants from Eastern Europe.Although the Netherlands has weathered the fallout from the 2008 financial crisis better than many countries, the government ran a deficit of six per cent in 2010 and is cutting spending and hiking taxes in hopes of balancing the budget by 2015.Prostitutes were told they would be audited in typically bureaucratic fashion, with a notice addressed ‘to landlords and window prostitutes in Amsterdam’ published last week in the city’s main newspaper.’Agents of the Tax Service will walk through various elements of your business administration with you, such as prices, staffing, agendas and calendars,’ the notice said.’The facts will be used at a later date in reviewing your returns.’Though the Dutch state is not going to fill its coffers just by squeezing prostitutes, the sex trade is a serious industry that went almost entirely untaxed until legalisation.The Central Bureau of Statistics estimates prostitution generates ¤660 million (US$865 million) in annual turnover, or a little less than ¤50 (US$65) per person in a country of 16 million – though many customers are tourists.Under Dutch law, prostitutes should be charging 19 per cent sales tax on each transaction. Customers typically pay ¤50 (US$65) for a 15 minute session. In addition, after-expense profits are personal income, taxed at anywhere from 33 per cent for someone making less than ¤18,000 (US$23 000) per year to 52 per cent for people making more than ¤54 000 (US$70 000).Sex workers, who are almost all women, can fall beyond both ends of that range.Nobody knows exactly how many prostitutes there are or how many of them pay tax, since legal ones are registered as one-women businesses, not brothels. But an Amsterdam-chartered study in October estimated there are slightly fewer than 8 000 prostitutes of all kinds in the city, and 3 000 working behind windows. An industry think-tank called the SOR Institute believes around 40 percent of window prostitutes already pay some income tax.’It’s more all the time – though of course there are some sex workers who refuse,’ says Mariska Majoor, a former prostitute who now runs an information centre in the district.’Their attitude is, we are stigmatised, made to feel that we are not part of society, we have trouble in getting a bank account – why should we pay taxes?’Metje Blaak, who heads a prostitute’s labour union called The Red Thread, said she endorses taxation, though it will hurt businesswomen already struggling to pay rent.’It’s not that they’re trying to terrorise us,’ she said.’They do everything under the guise of preventing ‘human trafficking’, but the real reason is simply a desire to keep things under control.’ – Nampa-AP

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