>The most important source of income for social security is the contributions of employees and employers.
>**Part of your gross wage – in most cases 13.07 percent – goes to social security. Those employee contributions have remained relatively constant in recent decades.**
>**The employer places the employer contribution on top of this. However, that part has fallen systematically in recent decades.** Whereas in the late 90s the employer’s contributions still amounted to approximately 34 percent of the wage mass, that figure today is almost 10 percent lower.
>**That is the result of a series of exemptions and the so-called tax shift. In 2014, then Minister of Finance Johan Van Overtveldt (N-VA)** reduced the patronal contributions to work, as a result of which social security loses billions in income annually.
1 commento
>The most important source of income for social security is the contributions of employees and employers.
>**Part of your gross wage – in most cases 13.07 percent – goes to social security. Those employee contributions have remained relatively constant in recent decades.**
>**The employer places the employer contribution on top of this. However, that part has fallen systematically in recent decades.** Whereas in the late 90s the employer’s contributions still amounted to approximately 34 percent of the wage mass, that figure today is almost 10 percent lower.
https://preview.redd.it/d8vbp9z8cqie1.png?width=768&format=png&auto=webp&s=d8eceff4fa84a3f15480503942028de800308f09
>**That is the result of a series of exemptions and the so-called tax shift. In 2014, then Minister of Finance Johan Van Overtveldt (N-VA)** reduced the patronal contributions to work, as a result of which social security loses billions in income annually.