From: DAVID A MOLNAR <molnard1@nevada.edu>
To: Vincent Cate <vince@offshore.com.ai>
Message Hash: 5bf4dcc4dff1c287db4ae1c3a8987dcb8c0304c185255476776708da67e9f8f9
Message ID: <Pine.OSF.3.91.960817172848.6275A-100000@pioneer.nevada.edu>
Reply To: <Pine.LNX.3.91.960817152107.21014B-100000@offshore>
UTC Datetime: 1996-08-18 02:20:11 UTC
Raw Date: Sun, 18 Aug 1996 10:20:11 +0800
From: DAVID A MOLNAR <molnard1@nevada.edu>
Date: Sun, 18 Aug 1996 10:20:11 +0800
To: Vincent Cate <vince@offshore.com.ai>
Subject: Re: US Taxes on X-Pats
In-Reply-To: <Pine.LNX.3.91.960817152107.21014B-100000@offshore>
Message-ID: <Pine.OSF.3.91.960817172848.6275A-100000@pioneer.nevada.edu>
MIME-Version: 1.0
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On Sat, 17 Aug 1996, Vincent Cate wrote:
>
> Robert Hettinga <rah@shipwright.com>
> > However, as Black Unicorn has noted here before, the Phillipenes are the
> >only other country besides the USofA where citizens are taxed any income
> >you get, no matter where on earth you actually earn it.
>
> It is not exactly that bad if you are outside the USA. I got ahold of the
> IRS codes on this before I left the USA (so about 2 years ago). The rule
> then was that the first $70,000 you earned was tax free if you were
> outside the USA for 330 days or more of the year. From another x-pat in
> Anguilla I heard that the $70 K had been increased.
Is this so? Last I had heard, Congress was looking at eliminating
the credit altogether. It's slightly misleading to call it "tax free",
though; the way I understand it, it's not included in the IRS's
estimation of your assets, but may play a factor in determining the final
amount of $$$ you end up paying. Very rarely does it translate directly
into a $70,000 break on your taxes, although it does help. At least
that's the way it has been represented to me (albeit by an expatriate
chapter of the American Businessmen's Association). There are no doubt
rules and exceptions to what manner of income may be exempted, as well.
It would be wonderful if the amount were increased. It would be
preferable if the requirement to pay taxes at all were eliminated, but
that would be asking too much of today's deficit-hungry, anti-"corporate
welfare" environment...
Not that it affects me anymore one way or the other, except insofar as it
hinders the desireability of U.S. workers abroad. One wonders that
whether the spread of such potential tax-avoidance schemes as
ecash/data-havens may, er, restore U.S. competitiveness in a novel way.
:-)
-David Molnar
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