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by trutannus
1736 days ago
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They have no capital gains tax. Overall the wealth tax is a lower cost to individuals than the style of wealth taxes en-vogue in a lot of places now. Wealth taxes require liquidation of assets to pay, given the nature of wealth. When you liquidate assets, you pay cap gains tax and then have to pay the wealth tax. In Switzerland, you just pay the wealth tax. Basically, you have to be taxed to pay the tax in most places, where in Switzerland you just pay the tax without being 'double taxed'. Liquidating assets to cover that tax works out to a lower overall tax burden on the individual than capital gains tax. Most nations that are mulling wealth taxes are considering them as an added tax layer, as opposed to the Swiss who use it as an indirect means to tax investments, rather than asking for a per-transaction gain payment. Nations that have done the approach that's opposite to Switzerland tend to reverse their wealth taxes, or see little benefit (France, for instance). |
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