IGEG
Institute for Global Economic Growth
By Richard W. Rahn
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
Published June 12, 2008
Do you believe the tax system should be used to punish people with unpopular views? One of old Soviet Union's actions that was most heavily and correctly criticized by human-rights activists both left and right was its confiscation of the wealth of those who chose to leave the U.S.S.R. The right to emigrate is considered by civilized people to be a basic human right.
Regretfully and embarrassingly, the U.S. Congress has just passed a law that places a higher tax burden (and in some cases wealth confiscation) on those who choose to permanently leave the
You may be thinking, so what, "it doesn't affect me and I don't care about those who leave my country." The reason you should care about how the government deals with such people is that wrong policies, if implemented, will undermine both investment and the rule of law in the
Some of the small number of Americans who renounce their citizenship and move elsewhere do so because they disagree with U.S. policies, and some do it to avoid what they consider unreasonable and excessive taxation. Others do it for very benign reasons, such as having married a foreign national and choosing to live in their spouse's country, not wanting to be double-taxed by the
People who choose to renounce their citizenship are often looked upon as traitors, both by those in totalitarian and authoritarian states, and unfortunately sometimes by those in democratic societies, even when their intentions are benign.
Many who immigrated to
Under the old law, tax exiles were required to file annual
This law affected very few people because low- and middle-income earners were exempted and clever people could legally and illegally get around it with relative ease. But, rather than get rid of the old, bad law, Congress decided to replace it with a worse law.
The new law will replace the current 10-year transition law.
People with insufficient cash to pay the tax on such unrealized capital gains, particularly those with illiquid assets, may face the choice of having the Internal Revenue Service seize their assets or become "tax hostages."
The apologists for Fidel Castro and Hugo Chavez will be able to point to this new
Yes, this law only affects relatively well-off people, many of whom could be charged with being unpatriotic. The reason everyone else should care is that once the principle and precedent is established that it is not wrong to discriminate against people because of their political beliefs, or former citizenship status, the fundamental concept of equality under the law has been undermined, which will also damage economic growth.
Laws like this are passed in Congress because some on the left think they may be able to get a few more tax dollars from "rich people," and some on the right think it is fine to punish people they believe to be unpatriotic. Both have forgotten that the purpose of government is to protect people and property and to ensure liberty.
Everyone would do well to remember the wise comments of the Scottish philosopher and economist Adam Smith when he wrote in 1755: "Little else is requisite to carry a state to the highest degree of opulence from the lowest barbarism, but peace, easy taxes, and a tolerable administration of justice, all the rest being brought about by the natural order of things."
Richard W. Rahn is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute and chairman of the Institute for Global Economic Growth. http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2008/jun/12/tax-hostages/
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