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<text id=94TT1644>
<title>
Nov. 28, 1994: Essay:Love It or Leave It
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Nov. 28, 1994 Star Trek
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
ESSAY, Page 96
Love It or Leave It
</hdr>
<body>
<p>By Michael Kinsley
</p>
<p> Surely the most heart-wrenching human-interest story in the
press recently was a cover article in Forbes magazine titled
"The New Refugees." These miserable souls are not fleeing conventional
forms of oppression, such as the famine, dictatorship, torture
and murder that have caused millions to seek haven in the U.S.
through the generations. These are rich folks who, according
to Forbes, are giving up their American citizenship--the very
status boat people by the thousands are risking their lives
for even today--because (according to one quoted legal expert)
they "can't pay the federal tax rate and live in the style they
want."
</p>
<p> Poor babies! To be sure, these are not exactly your classic
"huddled masses." Whether they are "wretched refuse," though,
is a different question.
</p>
<p> As a "trend" story, "The New Refugees" is a bit of a stretch.
It turns out that only 306 Americans gave up their citizenship
last year. Somewhat desperately, Forbes characterizes the number
of expatriates as enough to "practically fill a Boeing 747."
But out of 260 million citizens, the number is pretty small.
</p>
<p> Nevertheless, Forbes--a conservative publication, ordinarily
not averse to a bit of flag waving--brings enormous sympathy
to this tale of Americans abandoning their country. It seems
that "victim chic," ordinarily decried as a left-wing phenomenon,
knows no bounds of reason or ideology. These people, after all,
are less like traditional refugees than they are like the Americans
who went to Canada during the Vietnam War. They are fleeing
the draft--of their wallets, not their bodies. It's a smaller
imposition, some might think. Those who fled in the 1960s were
motivated, at best, by principled opposition to a government
policy and, at worst, by a desire to save their own lives. The
"new refugees" merely want to save money. And these financial
draft evaders are not even barred completely from our shores.
Under the rules, they are allowed to spend 120 days a year in
the country they decline to support.
</p>
<p> The "new refugees" aren't going to Canada. Nor are they going
to Britain, France, Germany or Japan. These grown-up nations
all have tax rates roughly equivalent to those in the U.S.,
or higher. Mostly the "new refugees" are going to island pseudo
countries with names like St. Kitts and Nevis or Turks and Caicos.
The U.S. says, "Give me your tired, your poor." These tax havens
say the opposite. They are places of Third World poverty where
the well-to-do, in exchange for some investment, are invited
to shed the normal obligations of citizenship in the developed
world.
</p>
<p> One of those obligations is the defense of freedom. Forbes notes,
without irony, that "the end of the cold war means wealthy Americans
can live in many developing nations safely." How long would
that be true if it weren't for the American defense structure,
paid for by the American taxpayer? The Turks and Caicos Islands,
freedom loving though they may be, are not exactly in the forefront
of the protection of that freedom.
</p>
<p> In predominantly middle-class nations like the U.S., taxes also
support a level of shared infrastructure (roads, sewers) and
social services (police, schools) that poorer countries simply
cannot afford. In those countries, the rich provide such services,
more cheaply, for themselves alone, and the poor do without.
One of the pleasures of membership in an advanced society like
ours is precisely the knowledge that certain mundane aspects
of life are shared by all. This gives a daily reality to the
otherwise abstract democratic ideal. We all drink the same water,
walk the same sidewalks, are guarded by the same cops. If 306
rich people derive no such democratic pleasure from life in
America, maybe they really do belong someplace else.
</p>
<p> True, American taxes serve a third function: outright redistribution
that supports even the poorest citizens at levels that would
seem luxurious by Third World standards. That too is a price
of membership in an advanced democratic society that either
you think is worth it or you don't. Of course we argue endlessly
here in America about whether tax rates are too high and whether
the government should be spending money on this or that. But
the U.S. will never be able to compete with Third World backwaters
for the allegiance of the mobile rich if tax rates are the only
criterion.
</p>
<p> Would-be refugees from the U.S.--"yacht people"?--might
want to wait, though, before burning their passports. The good
news is that, in some ways, this country is becoming more like
the Turks and Caicos Islands every day. As noted by thinkers
from Labor Secretary Robert Reich on the left to IQ-obsessive
Charles Murray on the right, technology and global trade are
increasing the gap between rich and poor (even as they make
us all richer on average). Increasingly, as well, affluent Americans
do provide their own social services, such as schools and security
and even roads in gated communities, while the general level
of such services in society is allowed to deteriorate. And with
the Republicans in control of Congress, the rich can even hope
for some relief from those allegedly confiscatory top-bracket
tax rates.
</p>
<p> So don't give up on America yet, yacht people. You needn't move
to the Third World. The Third World is coming to you.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>