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maisonjai
12-08-13, 10:36
Americans Giving Up Passports Jump Sixfold as Tougher Rules Loom
By Dylan Griffiths - Aug 9, 2013

Americans renouncing U.S. citizenship surged sixfold in the second quarter from a year earlier as the government prepares to introduce tougher asset-disclosure rules.

Expatriates giving up their nationality at U.S. embassies climbed to 1,131 in the three months through June from 189 in the year-earlier period, according to Federal Register figures published today. That brought the first-half total to 1,810 compared with 235 for the whole of 2008.

The U.S., the only nation in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development that taxes citizens wherever they reside, is searching for tax cheats in offshore centers, including Switzerland, as the government tries to curb the budget deficit. Shunned by Swiss and German banks and facing tougher asset-disclosure rules under the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act, more of the estimated 6 million Americans living overseas are weighing the cost of holding a U.S. passport.

“With the looming deadline for Fatca, more and more U.S. citizens are becoming aware that they have U.S. tax reporting obligations,” said Matthew Ledvina, a U.S. tax lawyer at Anaford AG in Zurich. “Once aware, they decide to renounce their U.S. citizenship.”

Fatca requires foreign financial institutions to report to the Internal Revenue Service information about financial accounts held by U.S. taxpayers, or held by foreign entities in which U.S. taxpayers hold a substantial ownership interest. It was estimated to generate $8.7 billion over 10 years, according to the congressional Joint Committee on Taxation.

Delaying Implementation

The 2010 Fatca law requires banks to withhold 30 percent from “certain U.S.-connected payments” to some accounts of American clients who don’t disclose enough information to the IRS. While banks can sign agreements to report to the IRS individually, many are precluded from doing so by privacy laws in their jurisdictions.

The Treasury Department last month announced that the IRS will delay the start of Fatca by six months until July 1, 2014, to give foreign banks time to comply with the law. The extension of the act follows a previous one-year delay announced in 2011.

Financial institutions including Canada’s Toronto-Dominion Bank (TD) and Allianz SE of Germany have expressed concerns that Fatca is too complex.
The latest delay comes after the Swiss government agreed in February to simplifications that will help the country’s banks implement Fatca.

Penalty Threat

“The United States wishes to ensure that all income earned worldwide by U.S. taxpayers on accounts held abroad can be taxed by the United States,” the Swiss government said on April 10.

Since 2011, Americans, who disclose their non-U.S. bank accounts to the IRS, must file the more expansive 8938 form that asks for all foreign financial assets, including insurance contracts, loans and shareholdings in non-U.S. companies.

Failure to file the 8938 form can result in a fine of as much as $50,000. Clients can also be penalized half the amount in an undeclared foreign bank account under the Banks Secrecy Act of 1970.

The implementation of Fatca from July next year comes after UBS, Switzerland’s largest bank, paid a $780 million penalty in 2009 and handed over data on about 4,700 accounts to settle a tax-evasion dispute with the U.S. Whistle-blower Bradley Birkenfeld was sentenced to 40 months in a U.S. prison in 2009 after informing the government and Senate about his American clients at the Geneva branch of Zurich-based UBS AG. (UBSN)

Compliance Costs

The additional compliance costs for companies to ensure that Americans they hire are filing the correct U.S. tax returns and asset-declaration forms are at least $5,000 per person, said Ledvina.

For individuals, the costs are also rising. Getting a mortgage or acquiring life insurance is becoming almost impossible for American citizens living overseas, Ledvina said.

“With increased U.S. tax reporting, U.S. accounting costs alone are around $2,000 per year for a U.S. citizen residing abroad,” the tax lawyer said. “Adding factors, such as difficulty in finding a bank to accept a U.S. citizen as a client, it is difficult to justify keeping the U.S. citizenship for those who reside permanently abroad.”

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-08-09/americans-giving-up-passports-jump-sixfold-as-tougher-rules-loom.html (http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-08-09/americans-giving-up-passports-jump-sixfold-as-tougher-rules-loom.html)

minority
12-08-13, 11:18
Frankly I don't see any benifit holding a American passport anyway. Theses days there are no value.

Higher chance to be kidnapped or Singled out to be executed by the fanatics who need to make a statement.

Laguna
12-08-13, 11:32
Banks are very unwilling to lend to US citizens

princess_morbucks
12-08-13, 11:36
For individuals, the costs are also rising. Getting a mortgage or acquiring life insurance is becoming almost impossible for American citizens living overseas, Ledvina said.

“With increased U.S. tax reporting, U.S. accounting costs alone are around $2,000 per year for a U.S. citizen residing abroad,” the tax lawyer said. “Adding factors, such as difficulty in finding a bank to accept a U.S. citizen as a client, it is difficult to justify keeping the U.S. citizenship for those who reside permanently abroad.”

Why are banks unwilling to lend to US citizens?

stl67
12-08-13, 11:44
Why are banks unwilling to lend to US citizens?

banks now dont want to do any busniess with US citizens because of the Dodd Frank Act. the paper work is not worth it as i was told

maisonjai
14-08-13, 08:41
Some indication where they are heading to, no absd for them.

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More Americans give up citizenship following tax crackdown
14 Auguest 2013

HONG KONG — The United States crackdown on tax evasion by its citizens living abroad is prompting an increasing number of Americans to give up their citizenship and settle in places like Hong Kong and Singapore, partly because of the increasing burden of paperwork required by US law.

“When I became an immigration lawyer 30 years ago, people really were excited about going to America. Now, more than half of my clients are people thinking of other alternatives, rather than people seeking to immigrate to America,” said Mr Eugene Chow, the Principal of law firm Chow King & Associates in Hong Kong.

“My mentor said to me, ‘You became an immigration lawyer to fulfil the American dream and now you are helping people leave’.”

The number of Americans giving up their citizenship has surged this year, although it remains relatively small compared to the six million living abroad. A total of 1,130 names appeared on the Internal Revenue Service’s (IRS) list of those who renounced their citizenship in the second quarter, according to tax lawyer Andrew Mitchel, far above the previous high of 679 set in the first quarter and more than was reported in all of last year.

The main trigger for cutting ties with the US, lawyers say, is the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act, or FATCA, which requires foreign institutions to disclose the overseas assets of US green card holders and citizens to the US government. Its main objective is to identify people who may be evading taxes through offshore investment vehicles. According to figures from Congress, tax evasion by Americans costs the US as much as US$100 billion (S$126 billion) a year.

A growing number of wealthy Americans in Asia are exploring whether to renounce their US citizenship or give up their green cards to avoid the onerous tax obligations. Some say they are exasperated by a growing raft of paperwork that forces US citizens living abroad to declare the minutiae of their financial holdings and other assets. That has increased the attraction of places such as Hong Kong and Singapore, where the individual tax rates are capped at 15 and 20 per cent, respectively.

Mr Jay Krause, head of the wealth-planning group in Asia for law firm Withers, says his lawyers in Hong Kong and Singapore are busy processing US tax returns under the IRS’ offshore voluntary disclosure programme, which is also designed to weed out tax evaders as well as people who have not filed their taxes in years.

Withers says many of its clients are giving up their green cards and US citizenship after filing their taxes, deeming the tax liability to be too onerous. Among them are US expats who see their Singaporean and Hong Kong peers paying a far lower income tax and not having to pay capital gains taxes, Mr Krause said. DOW JONES

http://www.todayonline.com/business/more-americans-give-citizenship-following-tax-crackdown (http://www.todayonline.com/business/more-americans-give-citizenship-following-tax-crackdown)