by MrBill » Thu 26 Jun 2008, 03:59:40
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('NTBKtrader', '
')Is the US gov trying to make it harder to 'financially' renounce US citizenship? If so, I didn't really find anything on that. I know the IRS is increasingly going after offshore tax shelters, but that is a different issue in my opinion.
Here is the article I was refering to:
UPDATE: escaping the taxman and other unintended consequences
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')
Under the proposed legislation, expatriates surrendering their citizenship with a net worth of $2m or more, or a high income, will have to act as if they have sold all their worldwide assets at a fair market price. If the unrealised gains on these assets exceed $600,000, capital-gains tax will apply. A study by the Congressional Budget Office guesses that the new law will progressively net the government up to $286m over five years. It is unclear, however, why people would suffer the consequences if they did not expect to save money in the long run by escaping American taxes.
That expats want to leave at all is evidence of America's odd tax system. Along with citizens of North Korea and a few other countries, Americans are taxed based on their citizenship, rather than where they live. So they usually pay twice—to their host country and the Internal Revenue Service. As this makes citizenship less palatable, Congress has erected large barriers to stop them jumping ship. In 1996 it forced people who renounced citizenship to continue paying income taxes for an extra ten years. Theoretically, the new law allows for a cleaner break.
But even as the law tries to prevent people from renouncing their citizenship, it may have the opposite effect. Under the new structure, it would make financial sense for any young American working overseas with a promising career to renounce his citizenship as early as possible, before his assets accumulate. For everyone else, plunging stock and property prices mean now may be as good a time as any to hand back the passport, says Kurt Rademacher, a partner at Withers, a global tax-planning firm.
Source: Congress increases the ransom expats must pay to escape the taxmanSo it used to be that someone with a large, unpaid tax bill might conveniently move to London or some other tax haven for a few years, and then renounce their US citizenship before realizing gains on unsold assets for example. Now the IRS wants its pound of flesh before they can give up their citizenship.
As the economic noose tightens more laws like this will no doubt come into effect. It was only two years ago that the US announced a huge tax amnesty for corporations to repatriate profits from abroad reducing the effective tax rate from 40 to 5% if I remember correctly? That still netted billions of dollars for the state, but more importantly it brought that capital back onshore.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'F')ederated Market Opportunity Fund, with $1.8 billion of assets, is designed for investors who are convinced that the market is heading for a slump, the Wall Street Journal said in its ``Fund Track'' column.
The Pittsburgh-based fund differs from other bearish funds, which use short-selling or buy commodities such as gold, in that it has a great number of international investments, the newspaper said.
Steve Lehman, the fund's manager, judges that the U.S. financial system is in worse shape than many observers believe and predicts many years of diminished economic growth, the Journal said.
``At major turning points, the crowd tends to be wrong,'' he argues; he avoids big U.S. stocks, going into areas most mutual funds avoid, such as currencies and commodities, according to the newspaper.
Lehman admits that Market Opportunity, which has returned 4.75 percent a year on average for the past five years, doesn't do well in a rising market, but he's sure that there's now ``a much more favorable environment,'' the Journal said.
His favorite shares at present are Canada's Barrick Gold Corp., which explores for gold, copper, silver and zinc, and Valero Energy Corp., a U.S. oil refiner, the newspaper added.