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by gamblor956
4562 days ago
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1) Yes, but if you legally reside in California [edit] or continue to do business in California, you still owe California taxes. Indeed, California will treat you as having not actually left California--and the federal courts would agree with them. (These jurisdictional principles have basic tax law worldwide for more than a century.) If you don't pay your income taxes to the jurisdiction(s) in which it is owed, you've committed a felony, and you'll end up paying all of the taxes owed, plus penalties and penalty-rate interest. There's also the potential for jail time. 2) There are many tax-regimes that are specifically targeted to prevent the movement of business assets offshore. In the US, running afoul of these rules is a minimum of $10,000 per violation (depending on the circumstances, potentially meaning per asset), plus the possibility of criminal sanctions. Moreover, locating assets offshore doesn't eliminate tax jurisdiction--you still owe income taxes in the jurisdiction in which you earn the income. (Basic international tax law.) All you really accomplish is to make yourself subject to additional income taxes in another jurisdiction, and worse--you may have rendered yourself out of eligibility for tax treaties that would have eliminated the double taxation. 3) Stop spreading FUD. The government isn't asking for 60%. And that's besides the point. Before the Reagan "Revolution", the marginal rate was greater than 60%. Right now, taxes are at near-historical lows. If you would prefer not to pay taxes, you could always move to a zero-tax haven like Somalia. I hear it's a lovely place this time of year. |
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Dubai is a pretty lovely place this time of the year (21C/70F temperature), and you'll pay exactly zero income and corporate tax.