Our
organization speaks to at least one new American
client interested in expatriating every week. In
most cases, the individuals are unable to pay
the federal tax rate and live in the style they
desire.
Every student
of American taxation is required to memorize
Judge Learned Hand's declaration: "Over and
over again courts have said that there is
nothing sinister in so arranging one's affairs
as to keep taxes as low as possible. Everybody
does so, rich or poor; and all do right, for
nobody owes any public duty to pay more than the
law demands: taxes are enforced exactions, not
voluntary contributions. To demand more in the
name of morals is mere cant."
Many people are
shocked to find that there are now Americans
expatriating and willing to give up their U.S.
citizenship in the process. There are now
boatloads of Americans willing to adopt foreign
citizenship rather than submit to what they
believe is confiscatory taxation.
In 1981 Ronald
Reagan lowered American tax rates. The following
year, no U.S. citizens renounced their
citizenship. The expat community, however, grew
by 306 names in 1993 and has picked up speed
ever since then. The new American tax exiles
include:
- Michael
Dingman, a Ford Motor director, who is now
citizen of the Bahamas and lives there.
- John
Dorrance III, a billionaire heir to the
Campbell Soup fortune who is now a citizen of
Ireland and lives there as well as in the
Bahamas.
- J. Mark
Mobius, a successful emerging market
investment manager. Mobius was born a U.S.
citizen. Mobius was able to obtain German
citizenship via his ancestry. He lives in Hong
Kong and Singapore.
- Kenneth
Dart, an heir to Dart Container, who is now a
citizen of Belize.
- Ted Arison,
founder of Carnival Cruise Lines, has kept his
Israeli citizenship and now lives there.
These new
American tax exiles join many long standing one
including Robert Miller, a major shareholder in
Duty Free Shoppers International Ltd. Miller has
a British passport obtained in Hong Kong.
The U.S. is
virtually the only country in the world that
enforces extremely high rates of income and
estate taxes on the worldwide income and assets
on non resident citizens. Expatriation has
become the ultimate tax planning tool.
A former
American citizen, for example, who adopts
Bahamian nationality pays zero estate tax. There
are generally significant income tax savings in
renouncing U.S. citizenship. For instance, St.
Kitts-Nevis and the Cayman Island levy no income
taxes while Costa Rica and Panama do not the
foreign income of retirees.
Although some
may have second thoughts about expatriation for
patriotic and practical reasons, the costs of
American citizenship may eventually outweigh
renunciation. The loss of American citizenship
is not terribly burdensome. Telecommunications
and convenient international airline schedules
facilitate the expat life. Now with the Internet
and satellite television, an expatriate can be
as well informed living in San Jose as in
Manhattan.
Frederick
Krieble, a director and former treasurer of
Loctite Corp., moved to the Turks and Caicos
Islands, where he runs an investment company.
Expatriation is not limited to the super rich.
Jane Siebels-Kilnes, a vice president of
Templeton, Galbraith & Hansberger, in Nassau,
followed in the footsteps of Sir John Templeton.
Templeton gave up his U.S. citizenship in 1962
and moved to Nassau. As a result, Templeton
saved over US$100 million on the sale of his
investment management company in October 1992.
Obtaining a
second nationality is not quite as expensive as
one may think. For example, St. Kitts-Nevis
requires the purchase of US$150,000 worth of
local real estate and paying US$50,000 in fees
for instant citizenship. For those with time on
their hands, Costa Rica offers permanent
residency with a US$50,000 investment in
reforestation and a passport a few years later.
Many mid level executives and small business
people nearing retirement consider expatriation
as a method to ensure a high standard of living
in a comfortable environment.
Of course,
expatriation is a fairly easy alternative for
the super rich who hold dual citizenship and
whose wealth is heavily concentrated abroad;
however, renunciation by upper middle class
Americans has become even more appropriate as
high taxes and irresponsible litigation have
lowered the emotional and economic breakeven
point.
Although
preferable from a legal perspective, an American
does not necessarily have to renounce their
citizenship. Many U.S. citizens do not mention
their participation in the estimated US$2
trillion held in offshore financial accounts.
Wealthy
Europeans and residents of the third world have
sent their funds overseas for years. Only now,
Americans are catching up. Today, Americans are
beginning to feel the same uncertainty about
their possessions and the need to send their
funds to relative offshore safety.
Foreigners and
former Americans can invest in the United States
with much more ease than an American citizen.
Although the IRS would like to tax non-voting
foreigners into oblivion, the U.S. needs to
think twice given the risk that foreign savings
are a major financing source for the American
budget deficit. The United States must compete
for international capital. If Washington treats
foreign capital poorly, it can easily go
elsewhere. Many individuals are surprised to
learn about the American tax exile movement, but
they must remember that there even exist limits
to the costs individuals are willing to bear
with U.S. citizenship.