Buying real estate to renovate in Italy, a good deal!
If we look at real estate ads in Italy, we see that roughly 10 to 15% of ads refer to real estate to renovate, with significant variations from one city to another. In some regions, such as Liguria, most of the buildings are over 60 years old. Nevertheless, the foundations, the walls, everything that is structural work, are quite solid. The causes of old age of real estate in Italy Italy is very densely populated, especially considering that the entire center of the peninsula is occupied, from north to south, by the Apennine mountain range. Building plots are therefore expensive, and there is not much availability. What is more, after the great post-war demographic expansion, Italy experienced the highest birth rate in Europe, which led to its population being the oldest in the world after that of Japan. In Italy, around 22% of the population is over 65 years of age. However, it is mainly young couples who build houses. All of this makes me expand the offer of real estate to renovate. Is buying a house to renovate a good investment? To date, the answer is yes, at least according to an analysis by Corriere della Sera, the main daily newspaper in Milan. Let’s see together why buying a property to renovate can be an attractive option. Real estate to renovate with lots of character It’s a matter of taste, but it’s hard to deny that old Italian homes have cachet. Even from the point of view of thermal and acoustic insulation they offer advantages, since the thickness of the walls often exceeds 30 cm, the ceilings are very high, sometimes with rounded vaults and doors. The same goes for the quality of the materials, often red bricks without holes, marble or stone stairs. Tax bonuses and minimum rates The tax benefits on extraordinary maintenance work on residential buildings have also been extended for 2020: this means that for expenses of up to 96 thousand euros, you are entitled to a deduction of 50% Irpef, spread over ten years. This percentage can go up to 65% for energy requalification works. Added to this is the particularly positive situation on the mortgage front: interest rates at historically low levels provide access to very favorable financing conditions. How much do you save? According to the Nomisma Observatory, the savings would be considerable even taking into account the amount to be allocated to the works. In Milan, for example, almost 80,000 euros would be spent to buy an 80 square meter apartment to renovate compared to a house ready to be lived in. In principle, the Irpef advantage significantly affects the choice of buyers when the price difference between the house to be renovated and that already habitable is at least 30 thousand euros. Facade bonus Without forgetting another factor of interest for potential buyers: the 2020 finance law increased the IRPEF deduction from 50% to 90% for painting and renovating facades. An initiative that stems from the desire to encourage the redevelopment of the residential heritage of many Italian cities. age of many Italian cities.
Italy: effects of global warming on real estate investment
Global warming will change the real estate investment situation, causing a gradual loss of value of buildings in the areas most exposed to its effects. The effects of heat waves Cities, but also tourist resorts more exposed to heat waves will suffer a devaluation of their buildings. Take the case of a city like Bologna, where the thermometer stays above 37 ° C for long weeks, with high humidity, from mid-June to mid-September. Of course this will continue and even get progressively worse, pushing more and more people to leave the city, or at least not to choose it if they are first accessing property. The same goes for the more populated resorts on the coast, those whose traffic is congested during the summer: too many cars and traffic jams give off unbearable heat. Flooding Ditto for coastal localities, or those near rivers which can flood, or in flood zones: their real estate will inevitably lose value. The combination of various factors linked to global warming – rising sea levels, extreme winds and suffocating heat waves – will lead to an increase in the phenomenon of coastal erosion, with deleterious (and unexpected) effects for the real estate sector. If adequate countermeasures are not taken, there is a risk that the buildings closest to the coast will actually be part of the seabed. And their value is therefore destined to fall rapidly. And, it should be emphasized, the problem is much more current than we think. The simple risk that a building – or a series of buildings – will be submerged by an abnormal wave or storm or that the ground beneath the foundations will collapse, is already lowering its value today. Studies in Germany, Finland and California have shown, in fact, that houses potentially at risk due to rising sea levels have been sold for much less than their actual value. According to studies by the IPCC (acronym for “Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change”), if the global temperature were to rise by more than 1.5 degrees Celsius, the melting of glaciers and the rise in level of the oceans will force 280 million people to flee their homes. These, in fact, will literally be submerged by “rising” ocean waters. And in Italy, the situation is not better. On the contrary: studies carried out by the ENEA show that 5,500 square kilometers of coastal plain in our country are threatened with flooding. Last year, 7 new coastal areas in danger were identified (Pescara, Martinsicuro and Fossacesia in Abruzzo; Lesina in Puglia; Granelli in Sicily; Valledoria in Sardinia and Marina di Campo in Tuscany), which are added to the coastal area of the upper Adriatic between Trieste, Venice and Ravenna; in the Gulf of Taranto; in the plains of Oristano and Cagliari; in Versilia; Fiumicino, Fondi and other areas of Agro Pontino; the coastal plains of Sele and Volturno and the coastal areas of Catania. Very large areas, therefore, and with a very high level of urbanization: half of the Italian population resides in the 5,500 square kilometers threatened with flooding. In short, if the countermeasures adopted are not effective, the real estate market in these areas could suffer an unprecedented collapse.
Houses for sale at 1 €, 2020 updated list of municipalities
Houses at 1 euro in 2020, list of municipalities that sell them. Which municipalities are currently planning to sell houses for one euro? According to the latest news, the 2020 municipalities in which it is possible to buy houses for one euro, with a subsequent restructuring plan for the revitalization of the property itself, are: Montieri in the province of Grosseto in Tuscany; Borgomezzavalle in the province of Verbania in Piedmont; Carrega Ligure in the province of Alexandria in Piedmont Sambuca di Sicilia in the province of Agrigento in Sicily; Regalbuto in the province of Enna in Sicily; Ollolai, in the Barbagia mountains, in the province of Nuoro in Sardinia; Nulvi in the province of Sassari in Sardinia; Lecce in Marsi in the province of L’Aquila, one of the first municipalities to have joined the initiative but where sales are currently blocked due to problems with the Revenue Agency; Vergemoli factories in the province of Lucca in Tuscany; Patrica in the province of Frosinone in Lazio. The initiative to sell houses at the symbolic price of one euro was born to save the houses and buildings of certain municipalities from neglect and deterioration. These are not, as it may seem from the price, completely dilapidated houses, nor cataloged as unusable, but simply houses to be renovated and which retain a solid structure. Buy houses for one euro, the rules When buying a house for one euro, it is necessary and mandatory to follow specific rules set by regulations. Each municipality in which this initiative is valid, in fact, provides certain rules to be respected, but the general and common objective is that the houses undergoing deterioration be restored according to a plan aimed at the recovery and renovation of the house. This is to enhance not only the good in question, and perhaps relaunch it on the market, but also to enhance the place where it is located. The initiative to sell houses for 1 euro could also represent an incentive for the real estate market, facilitating access to housing belonging to young people, who today face many difficulties in obtaining credit for the purchase of a first House. Additional costs Among the costs to be incurred for those who buy houses for one euro, in addition to the renovation costs, there are also all the notary and registration costs. Foreigners, in particular the British and the Germans, have so far been particularly attracted to this initiative. But many were also requests from Italians. The first country to launch the initiative to sell houses for one euro was Salemi, a Sicilian municipality in the province of Trapani, which launched this project eight years ago with the intention of recovering abandoned houses in the historical center. Followed by Gangi, another Sicilian city in the province of Palermo.
The by-law of condominium, or condo, in Italy
Like all forms of aggregation with other people, cohabitation in a condominium must also be regulated so that all owners and tenants can be fully guaranteed of their respective rights to use the property and the common thing. The act entrusted with the heavy task of crystallizing and containing these rules is the by-law of the condo. What is the by-law of condo and what does it contain? The condominium by-law represents the act which regulates a series of important aspects relating to the management body. In particular, the by-law contains the rules for the use of common objects and the distribution of charges, according to the rights and obligations of each unit, as well as the rules for protecting the decorum of the building and those relating to administration. It is therefore all these aspects of life in condo that must be regulated in order to avoid as much as possible the emergence of conflicts between units. This type of internal “payment” is accepted and accepted by the co-owners themselves and the payment also includes the table of thousandths in order to be able to distribute the charges. In addition to those established by law, the by-law may deepen and discipline other aspects and contents due to the peculiarities of individual condominiums. The rules of the by-law will not in any case infringe the rights of each unit resulting from acts of purchase and agreements, nor may it prohibit the possession of pets. Finally, the by-law cannot derogate from a whole series of provisions of the civil code in terms of condo, including those concerning innovations, the waiver of rights over common parts, indivisibility, the administrator’s obligations, etc. Contractual or assembly condo by-law The condominium by-laws can be of different types. The civil code expressly provides for what is known as the condo by-law of the assembly, or agreed and adopted by the condo assembly which approves it by qualified majority, both during training and during review. This type of by-law does not deprive a condo of the rights recognized by law, nor grant other rights. The so-called contractual (or negotiated) by-law, on the other hand, is prepared by the builder then normally accepted and approved by the units attached to the purchase contracts of the individual real estate of which it becomes an integral part. Although this by-law is not approved during an assembly, but at different times, it is in fact accepted unanimously by the units and, for this reason, it may contain more important constraints than that of origin of the assembly, limit the rights that individual units have on their respective properties or common parts, extend the powers of some or guarantee to others more important rights than others. Consequently, this type of by-law must always result from a written document and can only be modified with the approval of all the units. In cases where the assembly fails to form a condominium by-law, or the administrator does not convene the assembly at the request of the individual unit, it will be possible to appeal to the judicial authority. It will therefore be a resolution of the judge, to replace the assembly, to be responsible for preparing the (so-called judicial) by-law which will be valid for all condos. Is the condo by-law compulsory? The Civil Code, in art. 1138, establishes that the condo by-law must be adopted when the number of condos exceeds ten. However, since there is no sanction in case of violation of this obligation, if the condominiums required to adopt a by-law do not do so, their relations will be regularized by the rules governing the use of common things in general . For condos where this threshold is not reached, the drafting of a by-law is however optional: however, when you decide to adopt an ad hoc act, this will have the same effectiveness as the compulsory condo by-law. Adoption and modification of condo by-laws Always the civil code specifies that each joint ownership can take the initiative of the formation of the by-law of joint ownership or the revision of current. The assembly will then have to approve the by-law by a resolution, the number of votes for represents the majority of those present and at least half the value of the building. For the modification of the contractual by-laws on the condo, however, the consensus of the condos will be required. Once approved, the by-laws will then be attached to the register of meeting minutes taken over by the administrator and will be valid for all condos. It will be possible for dissidents to challenge it before the judicial authority, according to the procedures provided for in art. 1107 of the Italian Civil Code, within 30 days of the resolution. It is the task of the administrator, in accordance with art. 1130 of the Italian Civil Code, to ensure compliance with the rules of the condominium, as well as keeping the register of minutes of meetings, to which it will be attached.
Right of way in Italy: rights and duties
“Passage” events involving neighbors are not unusual at all. Consider, for example, those who can not access their land through a public road or who could access it on an easier route rather than a particularly winding route. In these cases, it is essential or, in any case, preferable to go through a street, a pathor a private road, belonging to another subject, or to pass directly by the neighboring property (the garden, the park, etc. .). These are special situations that the law has seen fit to regulate by making important provisions. Rights of way: what they are Rights of way or “Easements of passage” fall into the category of “predictive servitudes” that they represent, in accordance with art. 1027 of the Italian civil code, the weighting imposed on a land for the benefit of another land owned by a different owner. The land that bears the weight in favor of the other is called “servant”, while the land that benefits or enjoys the imposed weight is called “dominant”. In the rights of way, in particular, the owner of the servant land is obliged to allow the passage to the owner of the dominant land, which entails a compression of the right of ownership: normally, in fact, it is not permitted to those who are not owners to enter or pass through the property of another person. The derogation granted by the easement of passage therefore imposed on both of them a series of rights and duties. Right of way: how are they constituted With regard to their constitution, rights of way are divided into volunteers or coercive: in the first case, it is the parties who decide to constitute the right, for example by contract; in the second case, however, it is the law which provides for the right of one of the parties to obtain it. Nevertheless, it is quite possible to acquire a right of way through the penalty of a judge or even a usucapion, thus demonstrating the passage on the ground of the neighbor who has not been disturbed for twenty years. The usucapion concerns the only non-apparent servitudes, that is to say those in which there are visible and permanent works intended for their use. Land closed and not closed A typical example of coercive servitude is the presence of an inter-land land or, in accordance with art. 1051 cc, the land surrounded by the lands of other persons and who has no exit on the public road nor can obtain it without excessive expense or inconvenience: the owner of this land has the right to obtain the passage on the neighboring land for cultivation and appropriate use of its own land. In fact, the law allows for compulsory passage also in the case of non-nested lands, or where, although there is access to the public road, it is inadequate or insufficient for the purposes of the land and can not be extended. In this case, the judicial authority may grant the passage only if it recognizes that the request meets the needs of agriculture or industry or the accessibility requirements referred to in the disability legislation, and the needs of residential use of persons with disabilities. Rights and obligations of the owners The easement of passage occurs in the presence of neighboring buildings (not necessarily neighbors) and belonging to different subjects. Unless otherwise agreed, the law provides that the owner of the service land is entitled to an indemnity proportional to the damage caused by the passage. Owner of the servant land The owner of the servant land, who is subject to an enforced servitude, sees his right to the joinder restricted and, for this reason, the Italian civil code grants him an indemnity proportional to the damage caused by the passage (article 1053 cc) or the diminution in value of the property. The compensation includes both the actual damage caused by the easement and the depreciation suffered by the land. The owner of the servant land will not have to perform any specific act to allow the exercise of the servitude by the owner, unless otherwise provided by law or contract: in practice, one can not expect any behavior from the owner of the servant land. The owner of the servant land, however, may not in any way prevent or hinder the exercise of the right by the holder of the right of passage. For example, for security reasons (for example to prevent access to non-beneficiaries), the owner is allowed to close the land, for example by installing a gate, but the fence must not prevent the peaceful exercise of the easement of passage and the holder of this right must be able to enter comfortably (for example by giving him the keys or the remote control). Owner of the dominant land The owner of the dominant land, by carrying out the work necessary for the preservation of the easement, will have to choose the moment and the way in which it causes less inconveniences to the owner of the servant land, because he is not authorized to aggravate the discomfort that the latter suffered immediately. However, if the works also benefit the servant land, the expenses will be borne in proportion to the respective benefits. By mutual agreement, parties may also choose different methods of managing and distributing expenses. If, in order to carry out the passage, it is necessary to occupy parts of the servant land with stable work or leave a non-cultivated part, the owner of the dominant land will also have to pay the value of the above-mentioned area before starting the work or starting the passage.
Trend: look for a house near the charging stations
The Italian real estate portal www.Casa.it allows you to find a house for sale at prime points of interest: hypermarkets, schools, metro, and now, even charging stations for electric cars: a useful ecological feature. Casa.it’s home-based lifestyle search is enriched by the new criterion “near charging stations for charging electric cars”. It seems that electric cars are starting to take off also in Italy. According to recent data published by the UNRAE Center for Studies and Statistics (National Union of Foreign Vehicle Representatives), 6453 zero-emission vehicles were registered in the first eight months of this year, an increase of 109 % compared to the same period of the previous year. In this context, Milan ranks second in terms of BEV (battery electric vehicle) registrations by individuals and among the first cities in Italy to increase the circulation of environmentally friendly vehicles and charging stations. And Milan is the first city where Casa.it has decided to make available the new feature that allows you to search for a home near charging stations for electric vehicles. Between 2018 and 2019, charging points in Italy almost doubled (data from the City Mez report by Legambiente and Motus), but still do not cover the territory. For those who have chosen their philosophy of green life and have chosen to travel with electric vehicles, it may be important to have a charging station near their home. The new search function offered by Casa.it responds precisely to this need and adds to the criteria for identifying the ideal home based on the proximity of subways, schools and supermarkets, for those who have chosen not to use exclusively the car to move in the urban context. Everything is part of the innovative Lifestyle Centric Search project, exclusive to Casa.it, the only site and application in Italy to offer home-seekers new search criteria based on lifestyle. To those already announced, others will be added in the coming months.
Italy: Finance Act 2020, the upcoming property tax combining Imu and Tasi
The local tax unifies Imu and Tasi. A new tax is about to be born, already renamed Local Tax. New, in reality, is not the most appropriate adjective, since it is the unification of two already existing taxes: Imu and Tasi. The first concerns only second homes, while the second is administered by the municipality and is used to finance public services for the community, such as street cleaning or lighting. In the 2020 economic State budget project recently sent to the Senate, the two seem united, with a rate of 8.6 per thousand of the cadastral value (which is far below its real value) of the building. No increase in the tax burden Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte said that this provision would lead to no increase in the tax burden, since the total amount is to remain unchanged. But one factor must be taken into account: mayors will have the right to raise the tax rate to 10.6 per thousand, up to 11.4 per thousand in 2020. This mechanism does not apply to those who already pay the maximum IMU tax rate, as happens in some large cities, including Milan, Rome and Florence. Should pay more attention citizens of urban centers which, even if they are large, are not metropolises: according to an analysis of the National Institute of Chartered Accountants, the worst scenario at the end of the year could be an increase of 235 euros. With a municipal resolution, it will also be possible to decide to reduce the tax to zero or exclude from the tax properties, villas and castles of value, for which the tax is applied even when it is the main residence.
Real estate sale: the documents to bring to the notary
Real estate sale: the documents to bring to the notary When you buy a house, there is so much to do and think, just as there are so many documents to present to the notary so that the parties can, after the appropriate verifications, reach a mutually beneficial agreement, without fear of surprises. Some documents, or those needed to identify the seller and the buyer, are common to both. With regard to the property, the subject needed to produce the most important documentation is the seller. We thus see, without claim of completeness, which are the main documents to present to the notary when a contract of sale is stipulated. Documents common to the seller and the buyer The documents that the seller and the buyer must bring to the notary in case of sale are not always the same. The details When the seller and / or the buyer are natural persons, they must give to the notary: the identity card or other identification document and, in the case of non-European citizens, the residence permit or entry visa; the certificate of free status or, if he is married, the certificate of marriage certificate or certificate of civil union; a copy of any heritage agreement or cohabitation. Legal person Where, on the other hand, the person selling or buying is a legal person, the notary must receive: a copy of the legal representative’s identity document; any resolution with which the agent has been appointed to sell; the identification data of the legal person, or the resulting tax code, if possible, of the register in which it is registered, the name of the registered office and the name of the the legal person. Specific documents of the buyer The buyer who has applied for a loan from the bank must provide the notary with the contacts of the institution to enable him to have all the information necessary for the provision of the latter. In addition to this, he must deliver: a copy of the preliminary sales contract; a copy of the documents showing the amount already paid to the seller; and, if an agency intervened, the data of the same, the agreed commission and the copy of the documentation showing what has already been paid. Documents relating to the property The necessary documentation to identify the seller, the buyer, their status and their availability must be submitted to the notary with all the documentation relating to the property that is the subject of the purchase contract. These are the main documents to present: copy of the plan deposited in the cadastre, planimetric conformity to the inventory of fixtures and other cadastral documents possibly necessary; copy of the payment method proving what has already been paid by the buyer; if the buyer has taken over the pre-existing loan, he must provide a copy of the receipt of the last payment; copy of the mortgage certificate, to check whether mortgages are registered on the building or are subject to foreclosures; copy of the act of purchase of the property and, if acquired, mortis causa, of the declaration of succession, of the will, of the acceptance of the succession, of the European certificate of succession showing how the seller came into possession of the good; if the property being sold is inside a condominium, a copy of the condominium bylaw is required, accompanied by the condominium administrator’s certificate showing that the seller has paid the full cost of the condominium co-ownership and existence of resolutions relating to extraordinary expenses or litigation; a copy of all construction measures relating to the construction of the building, such as building permit, modification practices, etc. any authorization of cultural property, if the building is subject to monitoring constraints; copy of the viability certificate or documents proving that the application has been submitted; certifications of conformity of installations (hydraulic, electrical, thermal, gas); boiler booklet, showing the regularity of controls and its effectiveness; APE, energy performance certificate.
Matera, the long journey from “national shame” to European capital of culture
Matera, the long journey from “national shame” to European capital of culture Matera, where poverty, backwardness and lack of the most elementary hygiene rules characterized the life of the inhabitants of the Sassi, two blocks on the upper part of the city. Serafino Paternoster, coordinator of the press office of the Matera-Basilicata 2019 Foundation, the institution that manages and implements the cultural program of Matera Capital of Culture 2019, explained us the long journey that led the Lucan capital to become a city known worldwide and a reference point for European cultural tourism. The Sassi of Matera, a UNESCO World Heritage Site The Sassi of Matera were inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 1993. They were the first written site in southern Italy. The inscription was motivated by the fact that they represent an extraordinary urban ecosystem, capable of perpetuating from the most distant prehistoric past the ways of living in caves up to modernity. The Sassi of Matera are an exceptional example of careful use over time of the resources provided by nature: water, soil, energy. “The history of Matera is very particular, because it is a city with a unique feature in the world: it is one of the few urban centers where man has always been present during its millennial history. It is a story made up of declines and rebirths. In the immediate post-war period, in the Sassi of Matera, the community lived in very difficult conditions, with a very high infant mortality rate, which led the State to define Matera as a “national shame” and to issue a law that forced most of the citizens to abandon the Sassi to move to neighborhoods recently built on the outskirts of the city “. Abandoned for decades, the Sassi of Matera returned to the center of public attention. In the 1970s the fate of the Sassi was at the center of an international debate. “There were two ways to go: either turn the Sassi into an open-air museum, or try to make them live again. In the end they opted for this last hypothesis. The State attributed to the town of Matera roughly 100 million Euros (sum upgraded counting inflation of 50 years) to help the recovery of these Sassi and the return of the inhabitants to the districts “. Thanks to this revaluation process, Matera and its Sassi enter the world heritage of humanity, “the first city of southern Italy”. From a World Heritage Site to a European Capital of Culture From then on the spotlight turned on Matera, not by chance that many registers have chosen it as a set of their own films, one of all “The Passion” by Mel Gibson. In 2009 a group of boys decided to nominate Matera as European Capital of Culture – the Matera 2019 Association was born – the municipal administration decided to support this candidacy, beginning the journey that will lead October 17, 2014 with the proclamation of Matera capital European culture 2019. Every year two European cities become the capital of culture, in 2019 it was Italy and Bulgaria, and it is no coincidence that Matera shares this burden with Plodvid. In order to win the title of “European Capital of Culture”, Matera took part in a national competition in which 21 cities participated. Winning was not the most beautiful city, nor the oldest, but the city that was able to present its idea of change. “The cultural program of Matera is based on two aspects: the European dimension of the projects and the involvement of the citizens. Our work began ten years ago with a work of involvement and conviction of the citizens. Among the many projects carried out in recent years, I can remember, for example, the Urban Games held in five Lucan communes, with the participation of young people from Europe, Italy and Basilicata who were hosted by the families of these cities, or the ‘Balconi Fioriti’ competition which gave to the winners the opportunity to participate in urban workshops held by local artists “. Matera, the application file “After the title it is now time to carry out the cultural program written in the candidacy dossier, which has a cost of 50 million euros. Thirty come from the State, ten from the Basilicata region, five from the Municipality and seven from private sponsors. our cultural program is the people: for us it is a toolbox that we put at the disposal of citizens to enrich their skills. We are the only European capital of culture that has built a cultural program half entrusted to 27 creative companies from Basilicata ” . The tourism boom in Matera “Already during the application period we had a positive response in terms of visibility and positioning of the city. From 2010 to 2017, tourism has increased from 200,000 per year to 480,000 admissions a year, from 2000 beds to 10,000 beds , and we expect about 800,000 people to arrive in Matera in 2019. The real estate value has grown by around 3%, we have positive effects on GDP, with growth of 1.7% “. But what will be the legacy that Matera will leave as the capital of culture? “Certainly a position of Matera in the national and international tourist circuit together with more famous cities, to date we are the sixth national city of cultural tourism. We leave a city more open to Europe with citizens who look at Europe with a more sensitive eye The Foundation will close in 2022.
Italy 2020 fiscal law to woo back skilled workers
On June 27, 2019 a bill called decreto crescita, (growth decree) passed in the Senate and became legislation in Italy. The purpose was to reinvigorate the stuttering Italian economy; but it could also have major impact on the ability of the Italian economy to attract rich foreign workers, for instance football players. Come back or move to Italy, and you pay almost no income taxes for 5 years The bill is being compared to the Beckham law, a decree which was signed into Spanish legislation in 2005, that enabled rich foreign workers such as footballers to benefit from a tax break. Given that David Beckham was the 1st footballer to benefit from such a tax break when he signed for real Madrid, his name is forever associated with this fiscal law. From 2005 until 2010, this major allowed Spanish soccer clubs to stipulate some of the most lucrative contracts in football. Now, Italian clubs could do the same. Thanks to Article 5 of the growth decree. The aim of this section of the bill is the return of the brains, as the Italian government is trying to stop the brain drain that has hurt they Italian economy, bringing back skilled workers who had migrated abroad. In order to do this, a 5 years tax discount has been offered to anybody who, having been resident at least 2 years abroad, comes back to Italy for a period of a minimum 2 years to work. It doesn’t matter if a person is Italian or non-Italian. It applies to all. At the beginning of 2020 the new law comes into force. Anyone who benefits from the tax discount, if leaves Italy before 2 years, will have to pay back the deduction obtained. For the general population, those benefiting from the tax reduction won’t have to pay any income tax on the 1st 70% of the income, or on the 1st 90% of their income if they move to the regions in southern Italy. A bonanza for football clubs However, the government amended the law for footballers. Their tax reduction is limited to 50%, no matter if they play for a club in northern Italy or in southern Italy. However this is still a significant discount for football clubs. Imagine Juventus would like to offer a player a salary of €9 million a year. Before this Beckham law, Juventus would have had to pay €17.5 million, because the entire sum would have been taxed at the highest Italian income tax rate of 43%, leaving €10 million after the 7.5 million was paid to the fiscal administration. Under the new fiscal legislation, Juventus would have to spend only €12.7 million a year, because only 50% of the 10 millions would be taxed at 43% tax rate, for a total of 2.7 million a year tax payment.