bankside
JUB 10k Club
So it seems Americans, no matter which country they live in, roads they drive on, hospitals they visit, education system they rely on, are obliged to pay taxes to the US government.
Fair enough. Apparently most countries will let people go away and as long as they are living and paying taxes somewhere else, then that's the end of that. But not so for an American. You're free to leave the country, as long as you keep paying your US taxes. And I have no particular problem with that: it's their system, their citizens, their laws.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/glob...kdown-hits-canadian-residents/article2067393/
However, then their tax people have the presumptuousness to do this:
Nonsense! The US simply has no sovereignty outside its borders. And it is the height of hypocrisy to preach deregulation at home whilst claiming the right to regulate abroad. It's really not our problem how individual Americans do or do not pay their taxes. By way of treaty, there might be some scope for cooperation and quid pro quo. But by no means can a foreign government simply legislate how Canadian banks will report on Canadian bank accounts.
BTW, I have to comment on the amateur reporting there... Canada has no such thing as a "green card." I assume they mean Permanent Residents or Work-Permit holders or something.
Sadly, the US tried to do something like this before, with the Helms-Burton Act. Fortunately, we thus have a precedent and a response to this kind of nonsense in our law: the Foreign Extraterritorial Measures Act, which makes it clear that it is illegal to go along with the dictates of a foreign government, imposing million dollar fines for compliance: http://laws.justice.gc.ca/PDF/F-29.pdf
The real question is, will Harper's government have the integrity to adapt the act to this situation? Or are our objections just hot air from our Finance Minister.
What's your country doing about this? Aus? UK? NZ? France? Mex?
Fair enough. Apparently most countries will let people go away and as long as they are living and paying taxes somewhere else, then that's the end of that. But not so for an American. You're free to leave the country, as long as you keep paying your US taxes. And I have no particular problem with that: it's their system, their citizens, their laws.
A tax crackdown by the United States has sent more than one million Americans and green-card holders living in Canada scrambling to figure out how to comply.
The move is part of a push by the U.S. Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to make sure U.S. taxpayers are paying what they owe on foreign accounts. Unlike most countries, the U.S. requires its citizens to file annual tax returns based on their worldwide income, regardless of where they live.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/glob...kdown-hits-canadian-residents/article2067393/
However, then their tax people have the presumptuousness to do this:
Starting in 2013, the IRS will require financial institutions outside the United States to disclose all accounts held by current and former U.S. citizens and green-card holders. They will likely have to file years of U.S. tax returns and detailed annual account disclosure.
Nonsense! The US simply has no sovereignty outside its borders. And it is the height of hypocrisy to preach deregulation at home whilst claiming the right to regulate abroad. It's really not our problem how individual Americans do or do not pay their taxes. By way of treaty, there might be some scope for cooperation and quid pro quo. But by no means can a foreign government simply legislate how Canadian banks will report on Canadian bank accounts.
BTW, I have to comment on the amateur reporting there... Canada has no such thing as a "green card." I assume they mean Permanent Residents or Work-Permit holders or something.
Sadly, the US tried to do something like this before, with the Helms-Burton Act. Fortunately, we thus have a precedent and a response to this kind of nonsense in our law: the Foreign Extraterritorial Measures Act, which makes it clear that it is illegal to go along with the dictates of a foreign government, imposing million dollar fines for compliance: http://laws.justice.gc.ca/PDF/F-29.pdf
The real question is, will Harper's government have the integrity to adapt the act to this situation? Or are our objections just hot air from our Finance Minister.
What's your country doing about this? Aus? UK? NZ? France? Mex?























