Some countries have an airport tax that tourists pay as part of their air fare.
Generally, the mixed economy countries in Scandinavia such as Denmark have very high tax rates. Some people in Denmark pay 92% income tax.
it depends, in some countries the tax is zero. in others, you just ignore the taxman and take the cash.
In most countries it is the GIVER that is responsible for paying tax. However, if the gift is sent between countries, the recipient my have to pay the local import duties/vat as the giver is not in the jurisdiction of the local tax authorities.
Of course ! They will have to abide by the tax laws of the countries in which they sell their products. They will almost certainly have to pay import duty to any country they expert their products to.
Bahrain, Kuwait, United Arab Emirates, and Saudi Arabia, north korea.
Saudi Arabia is certainly one among them. monaco
the geneva convention
Sorry if I misinterpreted your question but if you are getting income from overseas into a bank account at home you could have to pay tax on the whole amount if you are considered a resident for tax purposes (which means you pay tax on all income you made world wide) but if you were not a resident for tax purposes you may only need to pay tax on the interest earnt on the money you deposited. It is quite dependent on your circumstances and the countries involved. Hi I lived in England for 2 years, I paid taxes in England but not in Canada. Not sure if it like this for all countries but the UK and Canada has an agreement where you only pay tax in the country you are living in and you are not double taxed.
Every single day for breakfast my young sir.
You don't pay tax on the tax-free pay and you do pay tax on taxable income
Factually it is one of the lowest...even at either the highest US rate which is actually paid by few. Remember, in the US @3% of the people pay 95% of the tax, and @50% pay not tax at all.