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Monthly Archives: October 2013

A Plea To Congress — Adopt Residence Based Taxation!

16 Wednesday Oct 2013

Posted by John Hanson in Politics

≈ 13 Comments

Tags

ACA, Expat, FBAR, FTACHA, IRS, RBT, Taxes

I am an American expat holding both American and Canadian citizenships. I live in Canada where I pay federal and provincial income taxes. America also requires me to file federal income taxes with them, the only country in the world with this requirement on its citizens, other than Eritrea, which America actually has condemned for this practice.

What does this mean? We need to consider a few other features, but for most of us, it simply means double the paperwork. It does for me, for now.

I get a FEIE (foreign earned income exclusion) of $97,000. I make less than that, so I get to write off all of my salary on my American tax return. Wow, you think. I wish I could do that. Remember, I live abroad and I pay taxes to Canada and New Brunswick. Your American rates are far lower. Don’t be happy for me.

Canada is a different country than America. I know most Americans have trouble with this concept, but that’s the way it is. Canada sets its own monetary policies and incentives for its residents – remember this word resident; it’s important. Because our taxes are higher, we also have generous tax savings incentives. I can invest in RRSPs, tax free savings accounts, company pensions, and other obscure vehicles depending on what’s hot with politicians at the time. Capital gains have been treated with favor as have dividends. Special deductions have existed for emerging market companies. I don’t know all the rules. Does anybody?

So when I’m done filing my Canadian mess – yes, it’s no fun here either – I then have to re-file with America. I cannot do it online because I live outside her border, so I download PDFs, fill them out as best I can, write off all my income, fill out RRSP waiver forms – I hope that’s what they are – and file zero taxes. I also file an FBAR (foreign bank and financial accounts) report. I have to list all financial accounts I have with a signing authority over. I have authority over all sorts of things – personal, child educational savings, and a charity organization. I have to file the account information and highest balance of the year of all these accounts.

Note 1: I wonder if I’m breaking Canadian law or professional accounting ethics rules by reporting a Canadian charity’s bank information and balances to the American government. If I am, what do I do?

Note 2: If this was done in America, there’d be revolution. Guns would fire at such a proposal.

Note 3: America already gets all of your financial data, so you do not have to file. Aren’t you happy you have such an all-seeing government?

I don’t own a business. If I did, it would be a bigger mess. They don’t get the FEIE. They have to claim the taxes they pay to Canada as a deduction. Ever do a business tax return? Ever have to do payroll filings? Yeah, fun. Now do it for two countries. I would never work as a contractor here, not through myself as a sole proprietorship. I’d at least incorporate and pay myself a salary. That way I could file corporately once , the easier individual form twice, and still maintain my FEIE. Fun. Not!

Some politicians in America – Raul Grijalva (D CA), John Tierney (D MA), and Mike Honda (D CA) – want to do away with the FEIE altogether. They see millions of us excluding huge sums of revenue and think it’s a loophole. Who knows how these politicians really think? Their analysis gives a number in the order of $71 billion in extra tax revenue over ten years. I don’t have their analysis, but I would bet $20 Canadian dollars that this is the expected total of the FEIE claimed.

http://isaacbrocksociety.ca/2012/03/27/congressional-progressive-caucus-budget-for-all-would-end-foreign-earned-income-exclusion/

Go back to my paragraph on business filers. If the FEIE disappeared, I would also claim foreign incomes taxes. I would replace the FEIE with the taxes I pay. I may not come out the same, though. This company pension I claim will not be allowed on my American form because it is not an American pension. That tax free savings account is not recognized down south. I and millions of others may end up owing taxes to America.

Fair? Hell not!

These are not legitimate taxes. These are taxes due because tax savings incentives in Canada do not qualify in America. I spend all of this money saving for retirement the best I can, and America undercuts me. They say you cannot do that. They say you have to invest in our vehicles. What are they called? 401K’s. I don’t know. I live up here. I cannot even buy them because I don’t live in America. My employer does not offer an American pension. And if they did, if I could invest in these American retirement plans, Canada wouldn’t accept them because I live in Canada. I’m a Canadian resident and I have to abide by Canadian tax law while I’m living here. The same goes for Canadians living in America – and there are many . They have to pay American taxes according to American tax laws. Makes sense. And you know what? They do not have to file taxes in Canada because they are not residents. They do not have to do double paperwork and try to figure out a way to make their 401Ks work in Canada at its higher tax rates. And if Canada did that? If Canada applied its higher tax rates to Canadians living in America, the American government would be all over it for stealing their tax dollars. My tax preparation will become more complex but so will the IRS’s. It will be more difficult to do the paperwork. Extra income will be offset by extra cost. And we will find other ways to not pay. Count on it. We will dump these useless tax savings accounts and find different ways to save for retirement. America will not save any money this way, and its citizens abroad will suffer more. We will likely renounce citizenship in droves. I know I will.

Congress, read this blog. You have seven million of us plenipotentiaries on the ground. Our influence abroad matters both financially and diplomatically. America’s image abroad is dismal, and I’m being nice. Very few of us help it. In fact, we join in on the denunciations. Very few of us talk positively about America, and most of us talk very negatively. Why should we help? You treat us like criminals. You treat us like shit.

Listen to ACA (American Citizens Abroad) and adopt their residency based taxation proposal. Do it now!

http://americansabroad.org/files/6513/6370/3681/finalsubrbtmarch2013.pdf

America Is Broken

12 Saturday Oct 2013

Posted by John Hanson in Literary, Poetry, Poetry, Politics, Writing

≈ Leave a comment

If you don’t know America is broken
get off your iPhone
and pay attention.
Our country is divided,
insular.
Myopia from the days of slaves
has never been cured.
America the beautiful
is a song, a dream.
It is a wisp of money,
a new hundred dollar bill
with fifty embedded trademarks.
You cannot enter a public building
or a famous building
or a famous city
without being scanned, searched,
and background checked.
There is no point calling someone
to  complain.
They already know
your every thought
from the taps on the line.
The snakes in the vine.
America is broken, I say
and don’t blame Obama
or your neighbor
or your Congressional fool.
The only person you should blame
is you.

Obamacare, Taxes, and the Expat — Support RBT!

07 Monday Oct 2013

Posted by John Hanson in Politics

≈ Leave a comment

I am in favor of the Affordable Care Act. To the point – it will enable me to return to America, if I so choose, without having to worry about living with no health insurance. As I approach my 38th anniversary of type 1 diabetes, this is a big deal. If I am in America and say my eye busts open again, what sort of costs am I looking at to see an eye surgeon? What does a pars plana vitrectomy cost these days? Prior to Obamacare, it might cost me $40k a year for health insurance, if I could even get it. And then the coverage might not even provide for my needs. These are the sort of risks that the so-called Obamacare can minimize for me. It can open doors for my return to the mother ship.

I may sign up for it now, from afar. I think I can do this, but I haven’t yet researched it. I would like to at least get an account. Get registered and check a box that says John lives outside of the country and does not need to pay anything, but if he ever returns, sure, he will fork over his share of funds. How do these things work? Can somebody tell me?

Better yet, I’d like to sign up for Obamacare and attain cheap health insurance, yeah, even cheaper than what I have up here in the Great White North, the supposed land of free healthcare. Diabetic supplies are not free here by any means. I do need health insurance, and the American Way is to find the cheapest. As an American citizen, I should be allowed to buy health insurance through Obamacare and use it up here. After all, I am an American.

Insurance does not work like this. I cannot buy cheap American health coverage for my Canadian expenses. Whatever I buy stateside has to be used stateside within the American healthcare system – doctors, hospitals, drug providers, etc. I cannot use it up here. Makes sense, just like about all other services I might want to use. I pay Canadian taxes which cover endless government services such as schools, healthcare, highways, police, armed forces, agriculture, natural resources, energy management, and on and on and on. A fundamental policy is you pay for services from within the country you use them. It makes no sense to have to have anything to do with Obamacare if I live in Canada. It makes sense to pay for services to the country you live in.

So why do I still need to file taxes? Why do I need to report all of my financial affairs to the American government? Every service I could possibly try to use – say sending my kids to school in Maine – would be rejected because I live abroad, yet I have to file tax returns. And if my foreign taxes are insufficient, then I have to pay America the difference.

Here’s a fun point. I cannot claim my company pension on my American tax return because it is a Canadian pension. Only American pensions qualify in America. I get a deduction in Canada but not America. This creates a risk for me that I may have to pay America the difference. Fortunately Canadian tax rates are high enough that this does not happen. America also gives me a foreign income exclusion of over $90k. I’m safe, for now. Until the idiots in Congress decide to repeal it again like they did in the 1970’s. http://isaacbrocksociety.ca/2012/03/27/congressional-progressive-caucus-budget-for-all-would-end-foreign-earned-income-exclusion/

I’m more fearful of planning my retirement. I cannot participate in all of Canada’s incentives. We have something called a tax free savings account. I can invest $5k a year tax free for life. Sounds great. Makes sense in a country with lower wages and poor savings practices. Yet for us expats, such an incentive is potentially cancelled by American tax policy. There are no vehicles for recognizing this tool, for exempting it from my American taxes. It is not a salary so does not qualify under income exclusion. It is not an RRSP, so there is no investment exclusion. America will want taxes on this money, so I cannot participate in my country of residence’s incentives, and I cannot make up for it by using American incentives. 401K’s are useless on my Canadian tax return. I don’t qualify for them anyway because all my income is abroad.

See my problem here? Everything I do depends on where I live except for my tax dollars. How does one juggle these things? Well, many are now packing in the fight and renouncing their American citizenship. I might just do the same someday. Or, with this Obamacare, I might just move back home and give up my life of luxury in the frozen north, the life where I can sleep with my doors unlocked without fear of home invasion, where I live knowing that 99.999% of the people I meet do not carry handguns, do not even own guns, or knives, or whatever, and where healthcare is free. Pure Utopia. Right.

Support residence-based taxation (RBT)!
http://americansabroad.org/files/6513/6370/3681/finalsubrbtmarch2013.pdf

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