About 10 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.
.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 15 percent marginal tax rates on this kind of
earnings, 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.
.In
terms of social security
payroll taxes in the US, Social security
deductions are applied to salaried income up to US$87,000 per year, and
at a top rate right now of 6.2 percent. This means if you are
unfortunate enough to earn US$87,000 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$87,000 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$85,000 per year is paying
6 percent of income.
.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 LEAVE OR NOT TO
LEAVE - 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 demonize 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 ATT, and then decide to switch over to Sprint
from today going forward, am I cheating ATT 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 ATT financially if they have
let me down somehow? It is the very same with countries,
citizenships 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, unproductiveness 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. WHY
IS THE GRASS
GREENER ELSEWHERE?
.Is
it
true that the grass is
greener in Panama, Ecuador, Brazil,
Thailand and the Dominican Republic (just to name but a few)?
Well, we could not necessarily say about the grass literally, but
certainly the long-term prognosis would seem to be. Again, taxes
are lower in many of these jurisdictions - but why? Taxes are not
in and of themselves a problem, but rather it is a reflection or
symptom of something else. Meaning, in many other countries, for
a variety of reasons (some intentional, some not), a bloated government
infrastructure and expensive social welfare scheme does not
exist. Also, a more libertarian environment does exist (in many
cases by accident rather than design), whereby the local culture is
such that people are still responsible for themselves (responsibility
has not been socialized) and government handouts almost non-existent
(as least in comparison or to the extent in Europe and North
America). This is a very important point, because even when it
comes down to the law and the local society, in many other nations,
citizens are still responsible for themselves. Which is to say,
responsibility has NOT been socialized. The government is not to
blame for everything (and is not responsible to act as a nanny, with
the charge of taking care of every one and every aspect of life via
regulation) and others are not always to blame for certain events
either.
.So,
why is it that such middle
class people from the supposedly
wealthier industrialized nations are attracted away to these other
places? In part, because like attracts like. Meaning,
expatriates are often enough Libertarians by nature. They feel
very comfortable with less government regulation, not more. They
do not want or expect any handouts from government, yet they do not
want government to pick their pockets either as the counter balance to
this idea. They believe in private property rights. They
believe in personal responsibility. They believe in short, in
liberty. An idea often enough expressed in words in many places,
but not practiced.
.So,
in summary, is the grass
greener elsewhere? It certainly can
be, and lower cost of living, lower housing costs and lower taxes are
only a part of the appeal. Liberty, freedom and escape from
the bloated and costly social welfare state yet another benefit that
can be found in some of the least
expected places as well.
..
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