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Purveyor

(29,876 posts)
Thu Aug 7, 2014, 12:31 PM Aug 2014

Americans Give Up Passports as Asset-Disclosure Rules Start

By Dylan Griffiths Aug 7, 2014 6:48 AM ET

The number of Americans renouncing U.S. citizenship stayed near an all-time high in the first half of the year before rules that make it harder to hide assets from tax authorities came into force.

Some 1,577 people gave up their nationality at U.S. embassies in the six months through June, according to Federal Register data published yesterday. While that’s a 13 percent decline from the year-earlier period, it’s only the second time there’s been a reading of more than 1,500, according to Bloomberg News calculations based on records starting in 1998.

Tougher asset-disclosure rules effective as of July 1 under the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act, or Fatca, prompted 576 of the estimated 6 million Americans living overseas to give up their passports in the second quarter. The appeal of U.S. citizenship for expatriates faded as more than 100 Swiss banks turn over data on American clients to avoid prosecution for helping tax evaders.

“Fatca and the Swiss bank disclosure program has intensified the search for U.S. nationals beyond all measure,” said Matthew Ledvina, a U.S. tax lawyer at Anaford AG in Zurich. “It’s shocking the levels of due diligence they are going through to ensure they have cleaned house.”

Swiss banks are trawling through records going back to the 1990s to find clients with U.S. addresses and telephone numbers, and those who received schooling in the country, Ledvina said. Those identified as U.S. persons are either being asked to leave or placed in special U.S.-only sections of the institution, he said.

more...

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-08-06/americans-give-up-passports-as-asset-disclosure-rules-start.html

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Americans Give Up Passports as Asset-Disclosure Rules Start (Original Post) Purveyor Aug 2014 OP
This is fantastic and important work. littlemissmartypants Aug 2014 #1
While there are tax cheats caught, the law also inconveniences honest expats Lydia Leftcoast Aug 2014 #2

Lydia Leftcoast

(48,217 posts)
2. While there are tax cheats caught, the law also inconveniences honest expats
Sat Aug 9, 2014, 09:37 PM
Aug 2014

Several translators I know who have lived in Japan for between five and forty years have taken out Japanese citizenship in the past two years, not because they have so much money but because it is the last straw. The U.S. is one of the few countries that requires expats to file income tax in the U.S., and that's bad enough, since they haven't lived in the U.S. for years and have no intention of coming back, but the new rules create difficulties for foreign banks that have American customers. They have Japanese spouses and children who have been raised as Japanese, so it akes sense for them.

Donald Trumps they aren't.

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