Rynar wrote:
SuiNeko wrote:
Uh.
The gist of that article is 'People who were avoiding their taxes by offshoring them, are now being forced to pay them by more stringent regulation, and are thus in some cases giving up citizenship to avoid it.'
So, if they were offshoring the wealth anyway, (or, by one reading, actually breaking the law) who cares? Whatever residual tax was being paid presumably wasn't significant.
You think those people paid no significant amount of taxes on their wealth in the US outside of what they were able to off-shore?
You have lost your damn mind. European liberalism, and it's lack of second tier logic, never cease to amaze me.
First, that's kind of rude, though that's ceasing to amaze me.
Second, sure. I'm not familiar with the us tax system but until recently moving my personal income to a very lightly taxed regime and having the bulk untaxed (effectively, not income) was eminently possible.
If we're assuming these folk are leaving because of tax burden (and the article states we don't know because who/why is not revealed), it also seems reasonable to assume they are the same types who would minimise their personal tax burden prior to moving - which to date (again, the article talks about new enforcement) has not been problematic.
400, already minimised, personal tax burdens out of many millions.
So what's the idiotic part?
Is anything economically significant tied up in US business or assets going to change due to an individuals citizenship?
Note: defining economically significant as 'we should care' and not 'they should care'; if I'm earning 30k a year then a 15k tax burden is pretty damn significant, but the loss of 15k to the exchequer really isn't.