Credit to renunciationguide.com for this information:
"[A]lmost all nations are unified on one point: a
country only taxes non-residents on, at most, income earned within the country.
Residents are fully taxed by the country according to its tax code. But if you
don’t live there, then your personal income tax obligation to that country is
limited to, at most, tax on only the income earned within that country. This is
the essence of what is called 'territorial taxation'.
The United States is an exception.
The USA is one of the few countries of the world which levies
personal income tax on all its citizens: not only on its residents – citizens
or non-citizens – but also on its citizens who do not live in the country. All
citizens of the United States are taxed under the same personal income tax
system, regardless of whether they live in the country or abroad.
This citizenship-based taxation is very unique. How unique?
[Answer:] only the U.S. and Eritrea.
Several countries tax non-residents for a short period after
they move abroad. For example, an individual who leaves a country may continue
to be taxed until he has been a non-resident for at least 6 months or a year.
But permanent, lifelong taxation regardless of residency is
extremely rare. In 1995, the U.S. Congress took (yet another) look at the
situation and found that only 3 countries in the world taxed based on
citizenship rather than residency: Phillipines, Eritrea, and the United States.
A year later, the Phillipines ended its citizenship-based
tax regime.
As for Eritrea, it imposes a special 2% tax on all Eritreans
abroad – dual-nationals included – in order to fund the dictatorial one-party
government which has ruled since independence in 1993. This is a special tax on
citizens abroad, as opposed to the U.S., which imposes the same tax regime on
citizens regardless of where they reside.
Eritrea does not allow renunciation of citizenship, so
anyone who ever was a citizen carries this tax burden his whole life.
The enforcement mechanism for the citizenship-abroad tax is
simple: if you are an Eritrean citizen abroad and don’t pay the special tax,
then your relatives in Eritrea will be severely harassed, beaten and
imprisoned. Additionally, the Eritreans abroad who don’t pay the special tax
are not allowed to cross the Eritrean border or are arrested when they attempt
to leave Eritrea.”
No comments:
Post a Comment