Comment by EFreethought

Comment by EFreethought 6 months ago

5 replies

Maybe this is a dumb question, but if you only deduct part of their salary in the first year, what happens if you have a software developer for several years?

And then what happens after five years if they are still around?

eadmund 6 months ago

> Maybe this is a dumb question, but if you only deduct part of their salary in the first year, what happens if you have a software developer for several years?

Not dumb at all! In the second year, you get to deduct ⅕th of the previous year’s salary and ⅕th of the current year’s salary; likewise, in the third year you get to deduct ⅕th of the first year’s salary, ⅕th of the second year’s salary and ⅕th of the third year’s salary.

The key thing is that in the fifth and following years, a business would deduct a fifth of each of the previous five year’s engineering payrolls. This is not great for a growing business, but it’s murder on a startup trying to grow from zero.

  • chermi 6 months ago

    Thus firmly placing this in the regulatory capture category.

stonemetal12 6 months ago

After five years you are back to the status quo. It is a short term problem, long term there is no difference between the two. It primarily hurts young companies that don't take VC money, and shortens the runway of those who do.

  • lsaferite 6 months ago

    It also affects hiring growth because every net new dev starts a new 5-year runway.

  • sarchertech 6 months ago

    It is much worse for young companies for sure, but it’s not great for any company.

    You’re forgoing returns on .1 * salary * tax rate for 5 years, .2 * salary * tax rate for 4 years… for every software dev in the company.