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What to Do About America's Rich Who Use Offshore Tax Havens
Robert B. Reich
May 23, 2007
After suggesting a couple of weeks ago that the stratospheric earnings of equity-fund
managers ought to be considered income rather than capital gains and therefore
taxed at 35 percent rather than 15 percent, I was deluged with emails telling
me the plan wouldn’t work. It would just drive fund managers into offshore
tax havens. No less than Jon Corzine, the former chief executive of Goldman
Sachs, now governor of New Jersey, admitted recently in a television interview
that many fund managers would take their money out of the country before
they’d pay the 35 percent rate.
Corzine and my other critics may have a point. Congress’s Joint Committee
on Taxation recently estimated that America’s super-rich already sock
away more than $100 billion a year in offshore tax havens. So any attempt to
get them to pay what they owe is doomed, right?
Maybe. But I’ve been thinking a lot about the immigration bill now pending
before Congress – especially the conditions undocumented workers will
have to meet if they want to become American citizens. One of them is to pay
all the taxes they owe.
The new immigration bill may not make it through Congress, but that provision
about paying taxes that are owed in order to be a citizen serves as a reminder
that paying taxes is one of the major obligations of citizenship. After all,
if we didn’t pay the taxes we owe, we wouldn’t have public schools,
police and fire protection, national defense, homeland security, roads and
bridges, Medicare and Social Security, and other things we need.
So when the super-rich use offshore tax havens to avoid paying what they owe
in taxes, they’re reneging on their duties as citizens. It seems only
fair to me that the consequence of that kind of tax avoidance ought to be loss
of citizenship. If it’s more important to someone to avoid paying what
they owe in taxes than to continue being an American, then let them keep their
money. They can become a citizen of the Cayman Islands or Bermuda or wherever
else they store their wealth, and come here on a visitor’s visa – if
they can get one.
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