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by shadowgovt 2145 days ago
You're always paying your employees' taxes. Documented workers with social security numbers need employer-provided SS and Medicare taxes paid for their "over the table" wages. A company pays fewer of its employees' taxes for undocumented labor.
1 comments

Undocumented labor doesn't pay income taxes. So the money is actually taxed in the company.
The net taxes paid is lower if an employer can avoid paying social security and Medicare taxes. Taxes on corporate income are lower (especially if the corporation can find a way to route that money to capital expenditure).
20% to 30% of an employee's income is straight up income tax paid out of the employee's income. If the employee is under the table, the employee's income is lumped in the employer's for taxable purposes. Social Security and Medicare taxes are maybe 1-2%. Look on any pay stub.
The employer still keeps more money, even if they're paying more in taxes. The employer may end up paying 20% of their income out in taxes, but they keep the other 80%; they're still out 100% of the money they pay to the employee, and if the under-the-table employee costs less than the over-the-table employee, they keep more money at the end of the day. Who cares if you're paying more tax if you have more cash?

And that's before we factor in that the over-the-table employee also costs SS, Medicare, unemployment insurance, overhead costs to administer all this because they clearly don't only have one employee, the list goes on.