cross posted from citizenshipsolutions.ca
Relinquishing US citizenship: South African Apartheid, the Accidental Taxpayer and the exit tax https://t.co/rU39vNoar0 via @ExpatriationLaw
— Citizenship Lawyer (@ExpatriationLaw) October 13, 2016
The above tweet references a “guest post” written by Dominic Ferszt of Cape Town South Africa. The post demonstrates how the “dual citizen from birth” exemption to the S. 877A “Exit Tax” relies on the citizenship laws of other nations. In some cases those laws of other nations are arbitrary and unjust. If these laws were U.S. laws, they might violate the equal protection and/or due process guarantees found in the United States constitution. For example, Mr. Ferszt describes how the “dual citizenship exemption” to the “Ext Tax” is dependent on South African “Apartheid Laws”. He describes a situation where a “black” U.S. citizen from birth is denied the benefits of the dual citizen exemption to the Exit Tax, which are available to a “white” dual citizen from birth.
(During the “Apartheid Era” Blacks were not entitled to South African citizenship.)
So, what’s the S. 877A “Exit Tax” dual citizen exemption and how does it work?
The dual citizen exemption, which I have discussed in previous posts, is found in Internal Revenue Code S. 877A(g)(1)(B) and reads:
(B) Exceptions An individual shall not be treated as meeting the requirements of subparagraph (A) or (B) of section 877(a)(2) if—
(i) the individual—
(I) became at birth a citizen of the United States and a citizen of another country and, as of the expatriation date, continues to be a citizen of, and is taxed as a resident of, such other country, and
(II) has been a resident of the United States (as defined in section
7701(b)(1)(A)(ii)) for not more than 10 taxable years during the 15-taxable year period ending with the taxable year during which the expatriation date occurs, or
Entitlement to the “dual citizen exemption” depends entirely on the citizenship laws of other countries …
Relinquishing US Citizenship – Exception for A Dual
National at Birthhttps://t.co/0SutFVcyj1Exception not well thought through! pic.twitter.com/fpChVLhh7m
— V. La Torre Jeker JD (@VLJeker) October 1, 2016
Virginia La Torre Jeker recently wrote a post, discussing the “dual citizen exemption” titled “Relinquishing US Citizenship – Exception for A Dual National at Birth“. In addition to providing an excellent summary of the “dual citizen exemption”, she writes:
Whether one acquires the nationality of another country “at birth” depends entirely on the nationality laws of the other country involved. I have recently learned that some of the foreign nationality laws can result in some very harsh discrimination. For this I reference the eye-opening article written by Mr. Dominic Ferszt of Cape Town, South Africa, titled “The Accidental Tax Invasion” and published in Forbes in 2014. My colleague John Richardson hosted Mr. Ferszt as a guest
blogger on his website to write about this topic.Provided below are some real life examples from Mr. Ferszt. These examples demonstrate how the laws of nationality of a particular country when compared to those of another country can bring about some very discriminatory results when applying the “dual national” exception.
Quoting Mr. Ferszt’s blog piece:“Example 1: U.S. citizenship acquired by birth in the United States:
Two babies are born next to each other in an American hospital: one to Argentinian parents, the other to Italian parents. Both families return back to their homelands. Thirty years later, the children choose to
expatriate: the Argentinian (because he did NOT acquire Argentinian citizenship at birth) must pay the exit tax, while the Italian (because he DID acquire Italian citizenship at birth) is exempt from the exit tax.Example 2: U.S. citizenship acquired by birth outside the United States to U.S. citizen parent(s):
Two American families emigrate; one to Australia the other to Greece.
Shortly after arrival they have children. 30 years later, the children
expatriate: the Australian pays no exit tax (the child was born an Australian citizen) , while the Greek citizen must pay the exit tax (the child was NOT born a Greek citizen).Example 3: Dual citizenship denied on account of apartheid
This is my favourite hypothetical: two U.S. couples, one white and one black, emigrate to South Africa in the 1970s and start families. The babies are U.S. citizens at birth. Yet, under South African apartheid, blacks were denied citizenship of South Africa. In such circumstances, the black U.S. citizen would be required to pay the exit tax; while the white one wouldn’t.”
These are only illustrative examples. Many other fact patterns can come into play that will have a similar discriminatory result (e.g., until recently many nationality laws provided for rampant gender discrimination — fathers could pass on citizenship, whereas mothers could not) .
Interestingly and regrettably, Canadian citizenship laws have been written in ways that could deprive “U.S. citizens at birth” the benefits of the “dual citizenship exemption to the Exit Tax.
Canadian citizenship law: The “became at birth a citizen of the United States and a citizen of another country” requirement …
The S. 877A "Dual Citizen" exemption: The 1947 Canada Citizenship Act and being "born Canadian" https://t.co/ChlUt9gMYV via @ExpatriationLaw
— Citizenship Lawyer (@ExpatriationLaw) October 13, 2016
The post referenced in the above tweet describes how a person born outside of Canada, in wedlock, to a non-Canadian father and Canadian mother, would NOT have been born a Canadian citizen.
To quote from the post:
If born in wedlock outside of Canada and the father is a Canadian then the child is a Canadian provided that his birth is registered; or
If born out of wedlock outside of Canada and the mother is a Canadian then the child is a Canadian provided that the birth is registered
Question: Under the 1947 Canada Citizenship Act, would a person born outside of Canada to a non-Canadian father and a Canadian mother be entitled to Canadian citizenship from birth?
Answer: No pursuant to S. 5 of the 1947 Canada Citizenship Act, the Canadian mother was NOT entitled to pass Canadian citizenship to the child. (This was changed in the 1977 Canada Citizenship Act.)
Conclusion: This is an example of a group of people who were NOT “Canadian citizens at birth” because of discriminatory citizenship laws. Changes to Canadian citizenship laws since 1947 have rectified this injustice. Canada’s citizenship laws now grant Canadian citizenship to those born abroad to Canadian citizen mothers on both a prospective and retroactive basis. In the context of U.S. expatriation law, this raises at least the following two questions:
- Did these people who were retroactively granted Canadian
citizenship from birth, “become at birth” a “citizen of
Canada”? - If they did NOT retroactively “become at birth” a citizen of
Canada, could their later acceptance of Canadian citizenship
“from birth”, be considered to be an “expatriating act” under
S. 349(a) of the U.S. Immigration and
Nationality Act?
I would start from the presumption that because amendments to “Canadian law” made them “citizens from birth”, that they ARE entitled to the “dual citizen exemption” to the Exit Tax.
Canadian citizenship law: The “as of the expatriation date, continues to be a citizen” of, …, such other country” requirement …
Entitlement to the “dual citizen exemption” depends on one continuing to be a citizen of Canada on the expatriation date. There is one group of people who were “Canadian citizens” at birth who lost their Canadian citizenship pursuant to an unknown (and rather unjust in application) law. This is described in the articles referenced in the following two tweets.
‘I had no idea that anything like this could even happen’:Arcane law strips unwitting Canadians of birth citizenship https://t.co/kU9Vki8Z1J
— Citizenship Lawyer (@ExpatriationLaw) September 18, 2016
Government officials were aware of arcane law that stripped Canadians born abroad of citizenship https://t.co/Qr29r94rGv via @nationalpost
— Citizenship Lawyer (@ExpatriationLaw) October 11, 2016
In human terms, the situation is described in one of the articles as follows:
VANCOUVER — Byrdie Funk had what some would call a quintessential, small-town Canadian upbringing.
At two months old, she moved from Mexico with her Canadian parents to a farming community in southern Manitoba. She learned to skate on a backyard pond and trudged between snowdrifts to school, where she would stand with fellow students to sing the national anthem before class.
She used her Canadian passport to travel to South Africa, toting a suitcase sporting the maple leaf, and was later married at a historic trading post on the banks of Winnipeg’s Red River.
But earlier this year the 36-year-old woman’s life was upended when she received a letter from Citizenship and Immigration Canada informing her she was no longer a Canadian citizen.
“It took my breath away,” Funk said in an interview from her home in Squamish, B.C.
“I had no idea that anything like this could even happen.”
The issue raised in this article is worthy of a separate post. At the risk of oversimplification, S. 8 of the 1977 Canada Citizenship Act contained a provision that applied to people who were born:
– between February 15, 1977 and April 16, 1981; and
– to parents who who were also born outside of Canada
Those persons automatically lost their Canadian citizenship on their 28th birthday unless, prior to their 28th birthday, they made an application to retain their Canadian citizenship.
This rather “draconian” rule
was explained (in part) by the Government of Canada:
Loss under section 8
As the loss under section 8 was repealed on April 17, 2009, only persons born between February 15, 1977 and April 16, 1981 are subject to loss on attaining 28. These persons had to make an application to retain citizenship before their 28th birthday and had their application approved to remain Canadian citizens.
Loss occurs even if the person resided in Canada. This means that persons residing in Canada who ceased to be citizens before April 17,
2009 under section 8 have no legal status in Canada. Persons who ceased to be a citizen under section 8 can apply for permanent resident status and subsequently resume citizenship under subsection 11(1) of the Act.
Requirements of section 8There were three requirements for retention of citizenship under section
8 of the Citizenship Act:register as a citizen;
have residence in Canada or a “substantial connection” with Canada; and make an application for retention.Registration
Before April 17, 2009, a person born outside Canada in the second generation was automatically a Canadian citizen at birth. For second generation born outside Canada, the approved application for proof of citizenship fulfilled the registration requirement of subsection 8(b) of the Citizenship Act.
Conclusion:
A person born born in the United States between February 15, 1977 and April 16, 1981, who was:
– born a citizen of BOTH the United States and Canada
– born in the United States to a Canadian citizen who was NOT born in Canada
– failed to register to retain his Canadian citizenship prior to his 28th birthday
– lost his Canadian citizenship because of the failure to register the retention of Canadian citizenship
would NOT be entitled to the “dual citizen” exemption to the “Exit Tax”!
The consequences of being subject to the Internal Revenue Code S. 877A “Exit Tax” …
For a complete discussion of the inner workings of the Exit Tax and how punitive it can be read here. I guarantee that you will see the benefits of the “dual citizen” exemption.
When it comes to this kind of unfairness (whether Canadian or American laws):
#YouCantMakeThisUP!
Thinking a little further on the “dual citizen exemption”: I wonder how many dual citizens learn of CBT/FATCA, start searching for an escape route, find out about this “exemption” and rush to sign up for it, when in fact they might not even be USCs. A certain proportion of dual citizens have probably committed relinquishing acts and never acted like a USC.
I don’t suppose the average tax advisor ever asks the question.
No, they don’t. It’s far worse. What has happened is that a significant number of people who were no longer U.S. citizens have been led into the voluntary disclosure programs by “the average tax adviser” and even the “above average tax adviser”.
@Tom
Thanks. Internations is primarily a social organization. I left a long time ago.
@Iota and others
I don’t believe that the dual citizen exemption was included to protect Cook v Tait, as anyone availing themselves of the dual citizen exemption would have to be five years tax compliant anyway. I see no reason why the unfair imposition of an exit tax would pose more of a threat to Cook v Tait than the unfair imposition of CBT.
I delved into the history of sections 877 and 877A some time ago. For those who are interested, I’m happy to share what I found:
While §877A was enacted in 2008, a search of the library of congress indicates that the pertinent text of §877A(g)(B)(i)(I) (the dual citizen exemption) was introduced into the legislative process on October 23, 1995 as part of S.1537. I’m no expert on US legislation procedures, but it appears from the sequence of events that proposed legislation is subjected to hearings, and presumably redrafted to reflect concerns raised at those hearings. My best effort to elucidate Congressional intent in regard to 877A is a C-Span video:
https://www.c-span.org/video/?64205-1/tax-policy-former-citizens
This is a House Committee Ways and Means hearing on March 27, 1995. While it is over three hours long, probably the pertinent viewing for this purpose is minutes 50 – 53 where Chairwoman Nancy Johnson advises the Treasury representative (whose department, I’m guessing, is party to the drafting of the legislation) that they need to focus on Americans seeking to avoid tax, and not ‘foreigners’ returning home (or words to that effect).
This issue was debated further on July 11, 1995 by the Senate Finance Committee in a 2 hour video:
https://www.c-span.org/video/?66084-1/tax-treatment-expatriates
At this point there were two competing bills proposed respectively by the Treasury and the Joint Tax Committee. Relevant excerpts discussing foreign Americans can be found at: 0:01:50; 0:23:27; 0:32:50; and 1:28:30. It is only in the last excerpt that any objection is raised to providing exemptions for ‘foreign Americans’ on the basis that it creates a privileged class of taxpayers. Ultimately the Joint Tax Committee bill was enacted in 1996, and it provided numerous exemptions. By 2008 however, the Treasury bill finally replaced the Joint Tax Committee bill with 877A.
It is worth mentioning that the wording of 877A(g)(B)(i)(I) remains identical today as when introduced back in 1995.
While the Joint tax committee bill was originally enacted, it did provide many exemptions. The Treasury bill, by contrast, provided the absolute minimum of exemptions; presumably to reflect the concerns of Nancy Johnson and others at the Senate hearing. Judging by the wording of 877A, I speculate that Treasury’s objective was to accommodate congressional intent insofar as absolutely required under, and consistent with, public international law (perhaps the concept of dominant nationality).
What is interesting about these hearings is that at no point does anyone mention or discuss the issue of Accidentals, long term expatriates and those without meaningful ties to the USA.
These exemptions were put in place because Congress wished to avoid the unfair exit taxation of foreigners who had come to the USA and who then wished to return home. If this issue ever found its way into a US court, would a US judge have more discretion to award in favour of groups and situations which hadn’t been contemplated by Congress?
@Domino – that is interesting. I didn’t know about the Joint Tax Committee bill.
Perhaps the vanishing exemptions might have been due to efforts to make the sums add up? If you’re trying to achieve a certain revenue target, cutting out exemptions is one solution. This probaby wouldn’t present a problem as far as the “dual citizen exemption” tax goes, given that it’s so easy for duals from birth born abroad to ignore the whole business.
If the IRS decided to pursue a case against a dual citizen born outside the US with assets solely acquired outside the US and no use of US passport or voting privileges, and if that person chose to fight it out in a US court, would the person not be able to contest the IRS’s right to tax him/her? I don’t know. I suppose it’s unlikely to happen, regardless of whether an exemption is available. So my speculation about the Treasury wanting to avoid a test case might be unrealistic.
@Iota
“So my speculation about the Treasury wanting to avoid a test case might be unrealistic.”
There is another category of ‘duals from birth’ who are born inside in the US but to non US parents who register their children’s birth with their home country. They may have held a US passport and earned a fair portion of their assets in the US but as long as they qualify for the requisite years living abroad pre renunciation, they also qualify for the exit tax exemption.
“Perhaps the vanishing exemptions might have been due to efforts to make the sums add up?”
Agree, since the treasuries raison d’etre is to collect revenue, it’s very likely.
@heidi – “There is another category of ‘duals from birth’ who are born inside in the US but to non US parents who register their children’s birth with their home country. They may have held a US passport and earned a fair portion of their assets in the US but as long as they qualify for the requisite years living abroad pre renunciation, they also qualify for the exit tax exemption.”
Sorry, I don’t follow. Why would they not, given that they meet the stated criteria?
You were arguing that the reason it was done was maybe to avoid a test court case.
“If the IRS decided to pursue a case against a dual citizen born outside the US with assets solely acquired outside the US and no use of US passport or voting privileges, and if that person chose to fight it out in a US court, would the person not be able to contest the IRS’s right to tax him/her?”
If that was the case, ie that they were afraid of a test case, then why not separate the two categories of duals from birth, as the ones born in the US would have a weaker case to defend.
It seems to me that as usual their logic is poorly constructed
@heidi – a different theory has occurred to me, which is that maybe the exemption is there to make it easier to smuggle post-expatriation taxation of former citizens into the tax treaties.
Who knows.
Well done once again to the Telegraph for publicising this disgusting injustice perpetrated on accidentals in the UK http://www.telegraph.co.uk/tax/income-tax/i-had-to-pay-8200-to-escape-draconian-us-tax-system/
Speaking of unfairness, how is subjecting duals at birth to CBT any less unfair than subjecting them to the exit tax?