They could maintain their current policy of citizenship taxation but for high tax countries like the UK, all they need is verification that we are UK taxpayers.
Isn't that the point of filing a tax return? And for the reputation of the UK being a high tax country, it's also a high-tax haven for many people to hide their money.
I woke up cranky this morning so apologies for coming off rantish.
Citizenship has its responsibilities and its rights. For US citizens one of their responsibilities is to report their worldwide income. Since the majority of Americans who live overseas pay nothing to the US treasury, I don’t see what the big deal is in reporting my income and filing taxes.
To me, it’s just another instance of people going out of their way to get worked up over something that really doesn’t affect them in a significant way.
Listen, I’m not a rah rah American type. I’m deeply cynical. I understand why some Americans would want to give up their citizenship. It’s a personal decision that I wouldn’t question.
But filing a piece of paper every year with the IRS or the Treasury, that doesn’t seem to be that much of a burden to me and you do get something for it, and not just the right to vote:
The right to live and work unfettered in the largest economy in the world, in a country that spans a continent, filled with varied people and languages, with a choice of varied climates and terrains and with some of the most exciting cities and towns in the world.
I agree with everything that geeta mentioned above. For all this grumbling about the burdens of US tax policy, i.e., the responsibilities, why is it that rights of US citizenship are disregarded? If filing taxes is so onerous, renounce.
The arguments against so far put the terms of citizenship purely in transactional terms, like you are buying the rights of being a citizen, or services provided by the government simply by paying taxes. This is absolute rubbish. A citizen living in the US who pays nothing, has absolutely the same rights (and responsibilities) as someone who does pays.
I don’t care about the Marines rescuing me or carrying a US passport necessarily or what the US government can do for me personally. What is important to me are options. If for whatever reason I can’t stay in the UK and need to move somewhere else, at least I have a choice to go back to the US, with my partner who is not a US citizenship by the way.
And, being cynical, more darkly, if there comes a time that I am no longer welcomed in the UK or Europe (and being a UK citizen, I may not be welcomed in Europe for much longer). I want to know I have a place to go to. This is one of the reasons I became a British citizen as well.
Think being forced from, or attacked in the place that you live could never happen? I’m sure many German citizens, who happened to be Jewish circa 1933 probably felt the same thing.