Posted 2019-October-28, 12:43
Switzerland has a wealth tax which we pay every year. This starts at a fairly low level (around $200,000), has an aggressively progressive scale, and replaces capital gains tax. It prevents some of the shenanigans that wealthy people can run with "unrealized capital gains" -- in the US (and most places with capital gains tax), the capital gains are only taxed when you actually sell. So people can play games where they don't sell, and instead take out loans (at very favorable interest rates with their unrealized capital gains as guarantee). Since the US has continually reduced/abolished inheritance tax and has this "step up basis on death" rule, you get cases where people bank billions in capital gains and never pay any tax on it during their lives, then pass it to their descendants (tax free, and with the capital gain basis resetting so it's NEVER taxed).
Anyway, to answer a few questions about the wealth tax:
1. Can you evade it by moving your money out of the country? No, it's based on your country of residency and not where your money lives. In fact most of our money is still in the US but we have to pay the tax.
2. Does it cause people to move out of Switzerland? Maybe; since Switzerland uses the normal residency-based tax you won't have to pay wealth tax if you move to another country. But Switzerland is relatively low-tax given the standard of living that its residents enjoy (neighboring countries like Germany and France have MUCH higher tax for example), so if you really want to avoid it you're probably moving to a very different sort of place. Note that Switzerland (despite the wealth tax) is home to an enormous number of billionaires so I doubt this is a big effect. Switzerland is also pretty careful about tracking where people live, and it might be hard to "actually live in Switzerland" while claiming to live elsewhere.
3. Can you avoid it by undervaluing or hiding your assets? This is probably possible if you put your money into something relatively hard to value like artwork, or convert it to gold and hide it in your basement, etc. But most wealthy people hold most of their wealth in real estate, stocks, and bonds, all of which are relatively easy to track and value. Further, the wealth tax tends to be much lower than the income you can make by investing your wealth, so if you hide your money in gold bars in your basement you probably lost more in interest than you gained in wealth tax avoidance.
Adam W. Meyerson
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit