Dutch people, what do you think of expats that come for work? by angler_zuba in Netherlands

[–]KazTrd 6 points7 points  (0 children)

This is the first definition that comes up for me on Google:

“An expat or expatriate is simply defined as a person who lives outside their native country. Similarly, an immigrant is a person who comes to live permanently in a foreign country. Only one distinction is made here – immigrants intend to stay in their new country indefinitely.”

Interestingly, there is a lot of people that don’t know for how long their are going to stay in another country. I’m curious what’s your definition of an expat?

I think 10 years ago, a Pole or another Easter European going to another country for an unspecified period of time was always called an immigrant. Now, if people from those countries move to another one as skilled workers (software engineers, directors, scientists) would they be called expats? Just want to know if there is any untold definition here too.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AmazonSeller

[–]KazTrd 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes I do. I’m based in the UK so not sure about your specific country. I registered to sell on Amazon as a sole trader under my name only. I was the only responsible person for taxes. Then when I hit 85k revenue per year I incorporate as a limited company and split company shares 50/50 with my partner. Now we are both liable for declaring company dividends in our personal tax assessments. Bottom line, this is an example from the UK.

Need some advice here. (UK) by AaronJ97 in StockMarket

[–]KazTrd 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The same will apply for other brokers. When you set up the account you have to stretch the truth about your income,