The fact is, more and more of us with solid middle-class incomes and perfectly normal lives are becoming increasingly concerned about laws that are poorly explained and advertised to us, but with huge potential penalties if we go unaware of them. These are exclusive to people living in other countries - if they imposed some of these on non-expatriates, there would be a riot.
It is becoming a very stressful burden.
The risk is too large for middle class people.
The second tax reason people give is the estate tax.
Fortunately between her and her husband they had enough money to get a good lawyer and get it sorted out before they tried to nail her for all the tax she owed.
I think the biggest issue with the "tax by citizenship" is that it turns US citizenship into a commodity to be traded for personal benefit.
It's noble to try to chase the tax dodgers, but it's a lot more practical to tax the people who stay and ensure anybody who wants to flee is going to be losing sizeable amounts of their property.
Canada has investment rules based on nationality/citizenship and the owners of those shares can't just elope and expect to keep their controlling interests. In fact most of the big companies that face these rules have their foreign investments near maximum, so that anyone fleeing would be forced to sell all their stake and selling a big stake of any company means selling at a sizeable loss.
It's pretty serious to give up your birth citizenship no matter where you're from. But, as someone with American citizenship, this doesn't ring particularly true for me. There are a number of passports I would trade, today, right now, for the one I currently hold. Anyone claiming American citizenship is the most coveted in the world is saying a lot more about themselves than they are the US.
So Estonia, Poland, Romania, Bulgaria, Slovenia (or is it Slovakia?), Lithuania, Latvia, Slovakia (or Slovenia?), and Greece have more valuable passports for their citizens.
If you travel a lot in East Asia, Japan's passport is awfully useful and has much nicer perks than US citizenship.
Obviously, France, Britain, Canada, Germany, Italy, Sweden, and other core wealthy nations have much, much better deals for citizens, too.
The US passport and citizenship is more and more like a third world quality passport every year, with one major exception. That exception, of course, is the right to live in the USA, which is a dang nice country with excellent open country, parks, forests, space to breathe free, big highways, fishing, hunting, the right to keep and bear arms, and fine honest people.
But if you don't love this land, you're better off with Latverian or Hungarian or Freedonian citizenship, because our politicians have done squat to keep our citizenship valuable around the world.
http://www.ibtimes.com/best-passports-have-unrestricted-trav...
US citizenship means you have tax liability on income overseas and dealing with a few weird things like the Cuba embargo, but you're also a citizen of the most powerful nation on earth, which does matter if you get stuck in a revolution or something.
We have somewhat shot ourselves in the foot here or there since we tightened travel restrictions on some countries. But it's still an incredibly good passport to have for traveling.
Obviously USA has a lot more to offer a plantation worker in Honduras than a wealthy retiree who might need some medical care.
Puerto Rico has this new tax law that basically limits taxes to like 4% or less, if you are a resident of PR. Let's say Bob is an American who expects to have a big exit in 2015 (or he has lots of GOOG stock and wants to sell it). Normally Bob would pay US capital gains taxes (15-20%, maybe 23.8%), plus California taxes (assuming he lives in CA). Instead, Bob moves to Puerto Rico, establishes residency. Then he sells his shares for US dollars, and pays Puerto Rico taxes. Then Bob moves back to mainland US, having saved lots of money.
Is there a flaw in the above situation?
3 scenarios:
If the business was started and sold prior to becoming a Puerto Rican resident, then taxes would be owed at US federal and state levels like normal.
If the business was started while resident on US mainland and then you moved and became resident in Puerto Rico (the OP's scenario), it gets a lot more complicated. Just considering capital gains from a sale of the business to keep it easier, you will owe taxes to both the US and Puerto Rico. These are called "built in" capital gains. You can look up details on this, but taxes are owed to the US and to Puerto Rico at rates that change over time depending on how many years you are resident in Puerto Rico before selling the business. This is the most complicated scenario.
If you start a qualifying Puerto Rican business after becoming resident in Puerto Rico and after having been accepted into Act 22, then you would start with a zero cost basis. This is the best case scenario. When you sell this business, you could owe 0% capital gains. However, during the lifetime of this business, you will still pay FICA taxes (15.3%) on earned income to the US Federal government up to the regular cut off levels, personal Puerto Rican earned income taxes on a portion of your income, and 4% corporate tax on business income. This is the easiest scenario since it starts with a zero cost basis.
Btw, IANAL.
TLDR 1.) Started & sold business in Cali, no capital gains tax benefit. 2.) Started business in Cali and sold after becoming resident in PR, crazy complicated, but taxes do apply at both federal and puerto rican level. 3.) Built and sold business in PR after acceptance into Act 22, and after becoming resident in PR, 0% capital gains tax, but other taxes apply during the lifetime of the business.
For those interested, residency is 183 days per year.
(Note: I don't know specifically about Puerto Rico, but generally the above is the case for US citizens in foreign countries.)
After that you only file income tax returns if you have income from US sources or you become a US resident.
The 10 year rule was repealed in 2008.
I talk to journalists all the time. I try to be helpful in some times they thank me by putting a quote in the article. Sometimes not.
Residence - this is easier to arrange. If the country will give you a tourist visa you're in, at least temporarily.
I realize your job is to handle these things, and I am not in any way trying to say "can you please answer some questions for free so I don't have to hire you later on" - I'm just a regular guy with a regular income and a regular life in another country who happens to have been born to a US citizen a long time ago. I cannot in any way afford to consult with an international tax attorney.
Feel free to ignore this random stranger asking for advice using a throwaway account :-)
The USA is the only country that taxes its citizens who live outside the country. I think that's what you're asking. British citizens living abroad don't pay UK income tax.
The IRS hasn't taken any interest in my clients -- the tax returns are clean and that's all they should care about. But the Lois Lerner affair shows that they are corrupt, unfortunately.
The people I know who give up citizenship almost all do it with extreme regret. I assume this feeling persists even after the fact.
1. I've heard that under a certain tax bracket this does not happen. Is that true? 2. I hear Canada will actually let you write off taxes you've paid to the US.
Many citizens, particularly those who have complicated fact patterns in their personal lives, are not capable of calculating their own taxes or would prefer to avoid doing so. Tax accountants and attorneys assist citizens in their obligations to calculate and pay the taxes required by the law, without paying more than they are obligated to pay.
I have a great accountant. (Hiya Cameron. waves) He sherpas me through my increasingly complicated international tax situation every year, which will never include renouncing my US citizenship but does often include such scintillating topics as "Does the US Revenue Code consider Japanese Self-Employment tax to be an income tax or not? If it does, should my income tax return for 2013 reference Japanese self-employment tax paid in 2013 or accrued in 2013? Is it most to my advantage to treat that as a necessary expense incurred by my business or as a deductible foreign tax or in some other fashion defined by the US-Japan Tax Treaty?" I pay Cameron so that I don't have to spend a week figuring that out, and can instead ship software, write emails, and otherwise move the business forward.
We're talking about American expats who permanently live abroad, do not utilize taxpayer-funded services, and aren't planning on returning home. Hell, they aren't even utilizing what one might call the privilege of American citizenship. From the government's perspective, there's really no difference between an expat and a corpse (excluding the IRS, naturally).
In that context, how can choosing to renounce their citizenship be considered immoral? Particularly when that citizenship comes with the rather significant problems that are the result of a federal tax code that taxes overseas income for taxpayers abroad whose income will never see the United States (nor, for that matter, will the taxpayer). If we're going to argue about ethical codes, how do you taxing worldwide income and the onerous penalties that disproportionately affect the lower quintiles?
This would solve so many problems.
The main issue why this remains a problem is that Congress doesn't care about American citizens who live abroad. Congress knows they can abuse Americans who will never comprise a large enough portion of any district for their votes to really matter. This is why people are actually renouncing. They have no other practical solution or representation.
Is WSJ really trying to argue that expats are dodging tax rules, not taxes?
Actually, yes. Maybe you didn't read the story, but it specifically talks about how the major burden for middle class expats isn't necessarily taxes but the penalties for failing to file specific paperwork.
Anecdotally, this is certainly true for the expats I know (including myself). I didn't have to pay any US taxes, but the penalty for not filing excessive disclosure forms on all local bank accounts is very onerous.
However, the issue with the WSJ article, where you would also have to disclose retirement and savings accounts or pay a penalty can be an unpleasant surprise for people. Makes me want to just put everything in my spouse's name and pretend the U.S. government doesn't exist.
This link needs to be here. If you're an American abroad suffering similar treatment, you can find support with these people who are in the same situation. They are trying to help end the US's unfair CBT citizenship based taxation and switch to RBT residency based taxation like the rest of the world already uses.