The New Expatriation Trend: Trading Places
It
has been estimated that over 2 Million people have expatriated
from the UK over the past decade, and now about 300,000 US
Citizens are leaving the US yearly as well (and it is
estimated there are already about 8 Million US citizens living
abroad, maybe more as most do not register as such). In
addition to that, the number of US citizens renouncing
citizenship has gone up exponentially during the past
decade. In fact, the number of people renouncing US
citizenship could set another new record in 2016 if the trend
continues (2013 citizenship renouncement is up over 200
percent from 2012 and 2015
was yet another new record year for citizenship
renouncement). Even American Comic Book Hero Superman
renounced US Citizenship in the 900th edition of Action Comics
back in 2011. But why are the best and brightest leaving
North America and Europe? Where are they going? Is
this a new trend or something else? What will be the
long-term result of such mass expatriation of the educated
middle class?
Indeed, as the poor and jobless from other countries still
seek to enter the US or the EU, it would seem that the
middle-class from those very same so-called wealthy
industrialized nations are heading in the other direction, or
we can say, possibly trading places with the people coming
from Latin America, Asia, Eastern Europe, etc.
About 20 years ago, a man by the name of Roger Gallo wrote a
book titled - Escape From America. Roger, thinking that
he locked onto something new and visionary, went to all the
major US publishers to see if they would be interested to
print and distribute his book. They were not, but that
did not stop him. They probably thought - Who is this
lunatic? Escape from America - Who would want to escape
from America? The answer is a large number of people, in
fact more than you could ever imagine. So, the first
question you might ask yourself is who is doing such a thing
and why? Who is participating in this great exodus from
the high tax welfare state countries and where are they
going? Where could possibly be better?
First and foremost, when you hear the term expatriate,
offshore banking, tax exile, offshore trusts and a number of
other things - what comes to mind? Probably what you have been
lead to believe by the much of mainstream media and rumors as
well. Which is to say, you probably think all of these
subjects involve very wealthy people trying to avoid or escape
taxes. Or you may think, such things involve criminals,
drug dealers, and those that are doing something
illegal. Go on, admit it - that is what you were told or
taught to believe. However, the truth is quite different.
Expatriating For Tax Benefits or Much More?
Let us start then with this first topic right from the start –
taxes. It is true that someone might be able to reduce
or eliminate income, inheritance and other kinds of taxes by
living in another country? Yes, but that is only a small
part of the larger puzzle. Meaning, there any many, many
other issues and motivations, which we will explore
shortly. Taxes might be the stated motivation for some,
but taxes alone are not always enough to push someone to
relocate. And not only the idea of relocation to another state
or province - but, rather relocate to another country, with
possibly a different language or culture. To be sure
however, taxes are a very visible and important issue.
If you think about it, of all the expenses or deductions you
have against your income (rent, mortgage payment, car payment,
etc.) income and social welfare tax (FICA or social security
for Americans) is the single largest deduction from your
income. What if you could reduce it or even eliminate
it? How much more disposable income would you have to
live on? It is curious to note that under rule by
monarchs in Europe prior to 1917, the average tax rate was
less than 10 percent. When the income tax was first
introduced in 1913 in the United States, the rate was 7
percent. So, what happened? How is it possible
that some governments can provide the services that they are
mandated to provide with taking so little, while others claim
they need to take 50 percent or more? Part of the answer has
to do with the great welfare state experiment put into place
after 1930, and part of the answer has to do with the nature
of public officials in a democracy as well. Which is to
say, regarding the latter, the nature of politicians in a
democracy is to spend other peoples money without any
repercussion. Citizens of a democracy are lead to
believe they have a voice or some control in that they can
vote out a politician at the next election, but the reality is
the politician (once in office) can run amok unchecked.
The financial damage is done, left to the next group coming in
to clean up or the taxpayer to pay for later on. If you
take a look at government spending in the so-called wealthy,
industrialized social welfare governments of the twentieth
century, you will find ever-increasing expenditures over the
years (as a percentage of the nations gross national product)
and ever increasing government deficits (debt, which the
taxpayers some day must pay for). You cannot live on
borrowed money forever and you cannot continue to take money
away from the productive citizens of society and simply give
it away to someone else (presumably much less productive)
without a price to pay (socially and economically).
Many middle class people in these highly taxed welfare state
democracies already are paying a hefty price - in terms of the
ability to maintain the same middle class quality of life
their parents were able to do before. One very blatant
example of this is the fact that a two-income household is
required today (in the so-called modern industrialized
nations) in order to provide the same lifestyle that only one
income could provide forty years ago. One of the reasons
for this is that real wages have been stagnant, and in some
cases have declined, over the past forty years, where as
inflation has consistently eroded the purchasing power of
money over time (and salaries have not gone up in
tandem). Why? One culprit that has accelerated the
devaluation of money has been the removal of the gold standard
after 1970, and the resultant true inflation of the money
supply (devaluation of the US Dollar), which has not been
correctly stated or reported in the selected government
inflation figures. Another reason is the inequality in
taxation rates, whereby the middle class have borne the
largest burden, both for income taxes and payroll taxes
(contributions to social security and other welfare schemes).
It sounds incredible, but it happens to be true.
Meaning, many people think or have been told that expatriates
or tax exiles are all very wealthy people who might be
interested in leaving for greener pastures. Greener
pastures? They have it pretty good right where they
are. For example, in the case of the US, did you know
that the super wealthy earn most of their accumulated wealth
from capital gains and not salaried income? This means
they (the very, very wealthy) pay only 20 percent marginal tax
rates in 2016 on these kind of earnings (it was 15 percent but
the current US President Obama increased it), where as most
middle class citizens who rely on salaried income principally
might pay about 45 percent on more on combined federal, state
and payroll (social security) as a marginal tax rate (often
enough, much higher). In Europe, the situation is in
fact even worse.
Social Security Taxes Hurt The Middle Class The Most
In terms of social security payroll taxes in the US, Social
security deductions are applied to salaried income up to
US$113,700 per year, and at a top rate right now of 7 percent
(and remember to add this onto your income tax rate, which in
reality means many middle class people in the US could
actually pay 50 percent or more in total combined taxation on
income). This means if you are unfortunate enough to
earn US$113,700 or less, you are paying a much higher
proportion of your income to welfare contributions than
someone earning more. Why? This is because
salaried income above US$113,700 is not taxed for these types
of payroll taxes (social security contributions). So as
a result, so as a percentage of income being paid in, someone
earning US$250,000 per year in salary is only paying 2 percent
(of gross salaried income) into the social security system -
where as someone earning US$113,700 per year is paying 6
percent of income in Social Security contributions (tax)
alone, not counting Federal, State and local municipal income
taxes (if applicable).
This might all sound like some sort of left wing rhetoric
designed to complain about the rich versus poor, but it is not
meant to be. It is however meant to clearly highlight
that it is indeed the middle class that have been hurt the
most over the last forty years and WHY this is the economic
group that needs to do something in order to survive.
The super wealthy in fact, do have an average lower tax burden
(as a percentage of earnings or income), and the poor pay
almost nothing (or certainly much less than the middle class)
and do get a tremendous amount of free benefits as well.
So now you know. The people that are leaving the US and
other so-called wealthy industrialized nations are the middle
class, and small business owners rather than the mega wealthy.
Also, it is not about taxes directly. Which is to say,
higher and higher tax rates is one of the symptoms and not the
actual disease. The disease is the wasteful government
expenditures, outrageous accumulated debt, and bankrupt social
welfare programs, which need to be funded somehow. The
disease is also the reduced quality of life, reduction in true
freedom and social ills that have come about from many of the
policies and agendas put into place over the last
half-century.
So, the questions remain - When will it end? How much
more can the populace be squeezed to pay for it all? Are
things being managed responsibly or will it get even
worse? Is it too late? While it can often be
difficult to predict the future, certainly one can surmise
what the potential future direction might be - and for many,
it does not look encouraging. In other words, a large
ship in motion (even after the engine has been turned off)
will continue to drift for some time in the direction it is
pointed. You may not know exactly where it will end up,
but based on the direction it is going in, you have a pretty
good idea, more or less. This is the overall concern for
many middle class people living in such environments and why
for many, the goal is self-preservation.
To Become An Expatriate Or Not - That Is The Question
For many people, the idea of leaving or expatriating from the
country they are in at the moment seems unthinkable. But
in part it also depends upon who you are and how connected you
are to the current social welfare system, which encompasses a
large number of things in general. If you are getting a
monthly government check, chances are you do not want to give
that up. If you are living month to month (even with a
comfortable salary or income), with no savings, no equity -
then equally you will find it difficult to extricate yourself.
However, this is purely an economic reason, as to why or why
not you may be able to leave financially (there are other
issues as well). Those people with some assets and some
savings can of course easily buy a new home or luxury
apartment for cash elsewhere and probably have enough money
left over to life off banking or investment interest (which
would be almost impossible in North America or Europe these
days). How much is enough? Well, if you do have
liquid assets of about US$200,000 or more (or have some fixed
income in excess of US$2,000 per month from pension, etc,
coming in) - you can realistically either retire, or in the
least have enough of a base income coming in to pay monthly
expenses from interest income (in the case of relocating to a
number of different countries). However, this is all
part of the problem to be aware of as well in terms of those
that would like to keep you against your will.
Meaning, those people that are so intertwined or tied into the
social welfare state system, or that are so broke that they
cannot leave - develop a subsequent jealousy and loathing for
someone that can or does. Of course this is not
manifested directly as jealously or loathing, but rather it is
displayed as an attack on the so-called moral and social
responsibilities of such persons (or the supposed lack of
moral and social responsibility). This is why you hear
such terms as tax cheat or some similar negative phrase
created to describe such a person. In other words, the
idea has been to criticize such persons as being anti-social
and anti-nationalistic. We are told then by the media
and government functionaries that such person are almost
tantamount to being criminal simply because they have decided
to leave and renounce government and or national
affiliation. We are lead to believe that patriotism is
intertwined somehow with the collective socialist welfare
state, and that we are not good citizens if we disagree or are
even disgusted with how things have turned out after 50 years
of such a direction.
But how is it so that a person that has legally earned an
income or has accumulated wealth in accordance with local laws
at the time, and that such a person has paid whatever share of
taxes they were supposed to pay up until that point or day
they decide to leave - be described as a cheat or a
criminal? If I pay my long distance telephone bill each
and every month to Verizon, and then decide to switch over to
Sprint from today going forward, am I cheating Verizon
somehow? All I am doing is deciding to switch from one
affiliation to another, presumably because there is some
better benefit for me to do so (better service, lower costs,
more options, etc.). Do I have some moral or other kind
of obligation to continue supporting Verizon financially if
they have let me down somehow? It is the very same with
countries, a citizenship and where you decide to live.
Are you somehow morally or ethically liable to stay and
participate in a system that might be detrimental to you
long-term simply because you had the luck (or misfortune) of
being born there? No one questions the motivation of
someone wishing to leave a nation with communism and a
totalitarian government in place. Yet, when someone
wishes to get him or herself away from a democratic socialist
environment, they are labeled as malcontents, crazy or even
worse.
Much of this is part and parcel to the psychology at work, or
maybe even better stated - a form of brain washing.
Meaning, there are many middle class people that can
financially relocate, but what is often holding them back is
themselves. Or, it could be the case that you are
contemplating the idea, but find nothing but criticism and
negativity from other people. In this regard, it is very
interesting to note this idea of nationalism or patriotism has
been a very useful psychological control tool for many
governments. Prior to the American and French
revolutions, people would move about at will - without
passports or checks on movement. In other words, even
though someone was born and raised in France, or Italy or
where ever - such persons of course identified themselves as
coming from a particular place, but they did not have any
mental hang-ups about moving and living somewhere else.
And in part, prior to democratic republicanism, rulers were
often foreign and changed so much, that people thought of
themselves are being part of a more open and fluid polyglot
society than they do today. One major change brought
about by democratic republicanism has been nationalistic
rhetoric and the idea that you are a member (and confined to
the borders) of a particular nation. With that we now
have strict border controls, travel documents and checks on
movement of the citizenry in and out. What is the point
of bringing this idea up and what does it have to do with
expatriation?
Well, today we live in a world where the local national flag
is used as more than just a symbol to identify a particular
country or territory. In is used as a psychological tool
designed to enforce and cement the idea of separation - us
versus them. It also is used as a tool designed to
convince citizens that they are part of a greater good that
they are responsible to somehow (in terms of the nation state
they live in). Stated another way, an emotional argument
is created in that we are all a group of worker bees existing
only to toil and benefit the so-called greater society (and
government that administrates it). But are we really? If
you were born in a particular country and the rulers of that
country corrupt or abusive in any way, does this mean you are
bound to stay there and take it? The laws of nature and
the very ideals of democracy and freedom would tell us that
no, we are not. Yet at the same time, ironically it
would seem that the idea applies to everyone and everywhere
else, at least in the minds of the leaders of countries that
expose such thinking. Meaning, using the US as an
example, it is thought to be natural and logical that citizens
of another country would want to immigrate to the United
States - but unthinkable that anyone in the United States
would want to leave. How can this be? Such a
person must be anti-social, anti-democratic and just plain
insane. If not this, then they must be radical lunatics
that wish to shirk the so-called social responsibility (read
this to mean financial welfare payments) that they supposedly
have for eternity (till death do us part, and even then there
are estate plus inheritance taxes).
In addition, in the case of Americans especially (who
certainly do not travel internationally as much as their
European counterparts) - they are taught and lead to believe
that the rest of the world is corrupt, evil, impoverished, and
without basic services considered standard or expected in a
civilized nation. This of course is not true and could not be
farther from the truth, yet many Americans still believe it -
because they are taught to believe it. Think about the
kinds of news stories and information you are fed.
Mostly, when it comes to other countries and international
topics, in the US particularly, you are lead to believe the
rest of the world is suffering economically, socially or
otherwise - or that is usually the slant. The spin
machine or propaganda machine is on full blast- and you
probably do not even know it. Maybe you do, and you do
not care or maybe you feel helpless to bother with a counter
argument.
Regardless, the idea is that you do have a choice. In
addition, we all should expect the respect of others in terms
of our and their choices as well. Meaning, if you
understand everything you think there is to understand and
have made a choice to stay where you are (regardless of where
that is), then you should do so. But, if someone has
made the decision to leave, then that should be respected as a
basic human right as well. Despite being told otherwise,
there is no irrevocable contract that binds us to any state,
location or any form of government. The idea or nature
of a contract is that two parties enter into it of their own
free will and agreement. Does this not mean then that
one or the two can voluntarily (and peacefully) exit the
contract as well (assuming one does exist)? And using
the basis of law, it is not true that one party can exit the
contract when one of the two parties fails to hold up their
end of the bargain? Certainly many would say that some
governments have indeed failed in the so-called contract in
terms of the modern social welfare state. Government
managed pension and health care programs are bankrupt, and now
they want more of taxpayer money to fix it. Public Debt
has been piled on top of debt, and it is the local citizenry
that has to pay for it some day in the future. Where is
the accountability and responsibility? Is it only a
one-way street in that one party (the person making payment or
the taxpayer) has to blindly continue while the service
provider can do whatever it wishes without compensation or
repercussion? In private business, a customer can and
will leave if the service provider drops the ball or is even
negligent. Government is also a service provider and
nothing more. It is not some mystical, magical entity
but rather a provider of services in exchange for payment
(taxes).
Roger Gallo identified this trend of people who have decided
to switch governments or switch countries some time ago.
In fact, he made the comment that in the case of the US that
Americas best and brightest are leaving. But he was not
talking about people like Bill Gates, George Soros or some
other wealthy high profile person. These people have no
reason to leave (although this group has been investing in
real estate and other things, outside of the US, for some time
now). They probably pay lower marginal tax rates than the
average person and they are certainly plugged into the
government spheres of influence as well. No, the person
being discussed was or is the independent self motivated
thinker that feels crushed and abused by a system that
punishes hard work, productivity, innovation and self reliance
- and rewards sloth and parasitic behavior (people that might
prefer to live off the hard work and earnings of
others). We are of course talking about the social
welfare state, run amok.
Interestingly enough, those countries with socialism and a
dictatorial government have failed already. Some have
gone away altogether (Soviet Union) while others have moved so
close to capitalism (China, Vietnam) that the founding
revolutionaries probably would not recognize the place
today. But what about the so-called free western
democratic socialist countries? In reality, this term
applies to what we have in North America and Europe at the
moment. Does socialism some how work better under a
democratic form of government than under a dictatorial
regime? Considering the current crisis regarding the
state of affairs with the government run pension and health
care systems in the democratic nations we referenced - it
would seem not.
About The Author: This article was written by John Schroder of Ascot Advisory Services. John's firm has been helping clients in the Dominican Republic for the last 17 years with residency application services, naturalized citizenship filing, banking assistance and legal services pertaining to real estate (title transfers, legal representation at closing, sales contract review). You can contact him by telephone at 809-756-1917 or click the about the author link above to reach a contact page to send an email directly.