The Spring That Forgot to Bloom
Imagine standing in a field just after winter. You expect growth, color, air. Instead, you find dry earth, last year’s dust, and a government holding a watering can filled with smoke.
That’s what the Spring Memorandum 2025 feels like.
Released on April 18th, it should have been a map forward. A signal. A breath of strategic oxygen. But instead, it lands in a country where inflation is already at 4.1%, where entrepreneurial confidence is sinking, and where consumers have stopped spending not because they lack money—but because they lack faith.
This isn’t about economic cycles anymore. It’s about civic exhaustion.
Entrepreneurs: The Forgotten Frontline
Let’s start with the people who build—not with slogans, but with 16-hour days, empty bank accounts, and mortgages pledged against a dream. Entrepreneurs.
They’re not being punished directly. That would be too obvious.
Instead, the government does something subtler, more elegant—and more harmful. It removes two key deductions that cushion transitions:
- The cessation deduction (for when you close or sell a business).
- The cooperation deduction (for when your partner works unpaid in your business).
These aren’t just tax schemes. They’re psychological scaffolds.
They say: “We know this path is hard, and when the time comes to stop, we won’t penalize your courage.”
Now, that assurance is gone. The deductions will vanish—75% by 2027, gone entirely by 2030.
Why? To fund a shiny new scheme for startups and scale-ups.
It’s a cruel irony. We’re financing the future by cannibalizing the present.
Inflation "Relief" That Quietly Tightens the Screws
Next, the sleight of hand.
The government has reversed its plan to raise VAT on culture and media. Good. That would have been another nail in the public soul.
But how do they pay for it? They simply decide that only half of the usual inflation adjustment in income tax will happen in 2026.
Let me translate:
You’ll earn more on paper because of inflation—but your tax brackets won’t follow. You’ll be bumped into higher tax rates without actually being richer.
It’s taxation by technicality. And it hits—hard—those who sit in the squeezed middle: the solopreneurs, the part-time earners, the one-man consultancies keeping their heads barely above the line of eligibility.
Energy and Housing: Two Lifeboats in a Leaky Ship
To be fair, there are gestures. The energy tax reduction (€529 per connection from 2026 to 2028) is a real help. And freezing social housing rents until 2027 gives breathing room to many.
The €1 billion “shopping bonus”—an increase in the rent allowance for 2026—is symbolic. Not just of policy, but of panic.
It says: “We know you can’t afford food and housing. So here’s a one-time patch.”
But a patch isn’t trust. And in economic psychology, trust is currency.
Startups Get the Spotlight—but Not the Stage
There’s a new incentive for employees of startups and scale-ups:
From 2027, stock options will be taxed at a lower effective rate—roughly simulating Box 2 taxation by narrowing the base to 65%.
That’s nice.
But it’s three years out.
And it’s being paid for by stripping existing support for entrepreneurs who are already operating—today, this quarter, this month.
It’s like feeding the seed by starving the tree.
And let’s not forget: no one starts a business because of future tax breaks. They start because they believe the system won’t betray their effort. That’s the missing variable here.
Defining Who Deserves Help: The New Language of Limits
The memorandum also tinkers with the concept of “allowance partners.”
It simplifies the rules, ending edge cases where roommates or informal caregivers were unexpectedly lumped together for benefit calculations.
Fine. Cleaner rules are welcome.
But the price? The asset thresholds for benefits are lowered—€113,000 for singles, €150,000 for couples. Fewer people will qualify. That’s not simplification. That’s narrowing the doorway and calling it a better hallway.
Austerity by Another Name
This isn’t framed as austerity. That word has fallen out of favor.
But make no mistake—this is austerity in the language of pragmatism:
- Cut reliefs.
- Delay compensation.
- Tweak definitions.
- Postpone support.
It’s not brutal. But it is calculated. And it shifts the burden downward—onto families, freelancers, early-stage founders, and cautious consumers.
The political logic is clear. The economic logic is brittle. The civic logic is absent.
Xtroverso’s Position: We Decode Before We Comply
At Xtroverso, we don’t lobby. We don’t flatter power. We decode. We analyze. And we side with those who create value despite noise, not because of it.
This memorandum may appear technical. But the signal is cultural:
"Risk less. Spend cautiously. Trust provisionally. And don’t expect the system to remember you unless you’re scaling, not surviving."
To all entrepreneurs, policy-makers, and thinkers: read it twice.
Once for what it says.
Once for what it signals.
Then ask yourself: Who is this really for?
Reform Without Reformers Is Just Cost-Cutting
True reform doesn’t just reallocate budgets. It rebuilds trust. It says: We will not let the invisible backbone of the economy—those who wake up early and go to sleep anxious—be ignored.
This Spring Memorandum may balance books. But it unbalances belief.
And belief, in the end, is what holds this whole game together.
Let’s talk. Let’s rebuild. Let’s not wait for another spring that forgets to bloom.
Co-Founder of Xtroverso | Head of Ledger and Tax Compliance
Linda Pavan brings disciplined precision to Xtroverso, anchoring its financial, fiscal, and operational integrity. As a ZENTRIQ™ Certified Auditor, she translates complexity into clarity—ensuring every decision is traceable, compliant, and strategically sound. Her quiet rigor empowers businesses to act with confidence and accountability.