Record Numbers Are Renouncing U.S. Citizenship
Newsmax
So far this year, a record 2,369 people have
either given up their American passports or surrendered their green
cards after long-term residency in the United States.
That is a 33 percent increase from the previous
record set in 2011, when the Treasury Department published the names of
1,781 people who had given up their citizenship or green cards, and this
year's total is likely to rise before year's end.
The chief reason cited for Americans renouncing their citizenship: avoiding U.S. taxes.
Unlike many other nations, the United States
taxes people based on citizenship, not on residency. So Americans who
move out of the country still have to file with the IRS.
Andrew Mitchel, a tax lawyer in Connecticut,
attributes the increasing numbers of expatriates to "the IRS cracking
down on people with overseas accounts."
He told CNBC: "All this publicity has really made
people more aware of these U.S. tax obligations and all the penalties
that can go along with not filling out the forms," which can be large
enough to bankrupt an overseas American.
Renouncing U.S. citizenship not only removes the
obligation to file with the IRS and pay U.S. taxes, it also solves a
common problem for Americans living overseas.
"They don't want to tell foreign banks that
they're an American, because the banks often don't want American money
in the bank," said Robert Wood, a San Francisco-based attorney.
That's because a law requires American taxpayers
to report information about certain foreign financial accounts and
offshore assets, according to CNBC. And it requires foreign banks to
register with the IRS and report information about accounts held by
American taxpayers.
There is a potential downside to renouncing
American citizenship, however. Those who do must obtain a visa to come
back to the United States, and there is a risk the U.S. government will
not let them in.
The Reed Amendment, introduced by then-Rep. Jack
Reed, D-R.I., and enacted in 1996, states: "Any alien who is a former
citizen of the United States who officially renounces United States
citizenship and who is determined by the Attorney General to have
renounced United States citizenship for the purpose of avoiding taxation
by the United States is inadmissible."
But people are not required to state why they are
renouncing their citizenship, and Mitchel said to his knowledge the law
has never been enforced.
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