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wagyl wrote:Wage Slave wrote:wagyl wrote:Those who have some concerns will probably be doing some number crunching over the next few days, calculating just how much they are prepared to pay to enjoy continuing to live in Japan.
On the contrary. If that method is correct - and it's nutty enough to be so - then it's far better not worse than I was speculating. This is because you only pay tax on your share but you can apply the full allowances. Then they share the liability (but only for your share) back out which is again to advantage because it is a progressive tax. Finally, they add it all back together. Great - if true. In the worked example the guy paid about 1% on his share of 100 million.
Please be true!
Remember that that calculation is based on the previously more generous exemptions, and also remember that owning a house in a major city these days adds up to a large sum: there are a lot of middle class dead people leaving those sort of amounts now.
I agree that it seems more fair than I first thought it would be. I will also say that I did run some numbers. Let's just say that my brother had better not die before my mother does (although my mother has very generously offered to write me out of her will) .
Wage Slave wrote:Edit to add:
“Inheritance Tax is, broadly speaking, a voluntary levy paid by those who distrust their heirs more than they dislike the Inland Revenue” – Roy Jenkins MP, Commons Debate, 1986
Samurai_Jerk wrote:Wage Slave wrote:Edit to add:
“Inheritance Tax is, broadly speaking, a voluntary levy paid by those who distrust their heirs more than they dislike the Inland Revenue” – Roy Jenkins MP, Commons Debate, 1986
Easy to say but I've seen too many cases where families who had no reason not to trust each other found out the hard way that you can't trust anyone no matter how much you love them or think you know them.
IparryU wrote:@wagyl thanks for digging all this up. nice sections you got together... we need to make a fucking guide out of this now.
Wage Slave wrote:Samurai_Jerk wrote:Wage Slave wrote:Edit to add:
“Inheritance Tax is, broadly speaking, a voluntary levy paid by those who distrust their heirs more than they dislike the Inland Revenue” – Roy Jenkins MP, Commons Debate, 1986
Easy to say but I've seen too many cases where families who had no reason not to trust each other found out the hard way that you can't trust anyone no matter how much you love them or think you know them.
That's where discretionary trusts can be useful - But yeah, you are right, it still relies on everyone behaving properly. I have come to realise from speaking to people here that I am very lucky to have that kind of family. Regrettably, I hear quite a few tales of being screwed over - and quite a lot of that can be done prior to the final curtain as well.
Wage Slave wrote:Samurai_Jerk wrote:Wage Slave wrote:Edit to add:
“Inheritance Tax is, broadly speaking, a voluntary levy paid by those who distrust their heirs more than they dislike the Inland Revenue” – Roy Jenkins MP, Commons Debate, 1986
Easy to say but I've seen too many cases where families who had no reason not to trust each other found out the hard way that you can't trust anyone no matter how much you love them or think you know them.
That's where discretionary trusts can be useful - But yeah, you are right, it still relies on everyone behaving properly. I have come to realise from speaking to people here that I am very lucky to have that kind of family. Regrettably, I hear quite a few tales of being screwed over - and quite a lot of that can be done prior to the final curtain as well.
chokonen888 wrote:Another tangent...
Is the whole "your house is worthless or neg value after 30 years" tied to this at all?
Taken a step further, if you inherit a home overseas, well over 30 years old...unless you sell the property, how can they pin a value on it?
chokonen888 wrote:Another tangent...
Is the whole "your house is worthless or neg value after 30 years" tied to this at all?
Taken a step further, if you inherit a home overseas, well over 30 years old...unless you sell the property, how can they pin a value on it?
chokonen888 wrote:I know what appraisers are but since it's a Japanese tax, why wouldn't the Japanese-style appraisal apply?
wagyl wrote:chokonen888 wrote:I know what appraisers are but since it's a Japanese tax, why wouldn't the Japanese-style appraisal apply?
Japanese style appraisal = what the market will pay for the property.
Foreign style appraisal = what the market will pay for the property.
Point out the difference.
wagyl wrote:Yes, I know what you are saying, but you also sound like a ....... God, there has to be an American equivalent of this slang but for the moment I will say "bush lawyer": "person who uses casuistry when arguing, especially by inventive interpretation of rules, terms, etc." Like someone interpreting any leeway to suit their own argument and stretching definitions just that little bit too far. Trying that at a tax office is a very quick way to get slapped with the rule book and an "audit" stamp on your file.
Samurai_Jerk wrote:
I thought everything went fine with my mom's estate and was really happy at how reasonable everyone had been considering all the horror stories I'd heard from friends only to find out a couple of years later someone had fucked the rest of us. It wasn't a money thing but more of a family heirloom thing (though that heirloom is definitely valuable) that we had thought lost. Turns out it was gifted to a significant other in such a way that it would be very hard to reclaim.
chokonen888 wrote:wagyl wrote:chokonen888 wrote:I know what appraisers are but since it's a Japanese tax, why wouldn't the Japanese-style appraisal apply?
Japanese style appraisal = what the market will pay for the property.
Foreign style appraisal = what the market will pay for the property.
Point out the difference.
Where do I begin?
http://www.nri.com/global/opinion/paper ... 008137.pdf
I guess it's easier to just tell the J-tax office, of course with an appropriate amount of teeth sucking, that your parents both died in the home and it's haunted....so the market value is zero or in the neg since the building obviously needs demolishing.wagyl wrote:Yes, I know what you are saying, but you also sound like a ....... God, there has to be an American equivalent of this slang but for the moment I will say "bush lawyer": "person who uses casuistry when arguing, especially by inventive interpretation of rules, terms, etc." Like someone interpreting any leeway to suit their own argument and stretching definitions just that little bit too far. Trying that at a tax office is a very quick way to get slapped with the rule book and an "audit" stamp on your file.
I prefer my battles without bush and I'm half jesting with all this but I guess my point is the way things are playing out, it looks like they are aiming this mostly at Japanese who have oversea assets and with a sidenote, are taking overreaching swipes at FG oversea assets, even if said FG aren't given a reasonable shake when it comes to their residency, rights, etc....which, as we all know, has many further implication on a FG's life here. Legally speaking, yeah, I understand how it's supposed to work. In practice, however, it can put you in a sort of FG limbo.
So....if you're an FG, looking at inheriting a significant amount of wealth in a country without inheritance laws, it wouldn't seem so smart to become a tax bitch of Japan, yes? Just a guess but wouldn't seem to include a good chunk of the affluent/skilled workers Japan is supposedly attempting to attract?
chokonen888 wrote:wagyl wrote:chokonen888 wrote:I know what appraisers are but since it's a Japanese tax, why wouldn't the Japanese-style appraisal apply?
Japanese style appraisal = what the market will pay for the property.
Foreign style appraisal = what the market will pay for the property.
Point out the difference.
Where do I begin?
http://www.nri.com/global/opinion/paper ... 008137.pdf
Coligny wrote:Samurai_Jerk wrote:
I thought everything went fine with my mom's estate and was really happy at how reasonable everyone had been considering all the horror stories I'd heard from friends only to find out a couple of years later someone had fucked the rest of us. It wasn't a money thing but more of a family heirloom thing (though that heirloom is definitely valuable) that we had thought lost. Turns out it was gifted to a significant other in such a way that it would be very hard to reclaim.
Might have been better to somewhat realize quite sometimes after (then go "fuck it anyway") than add the fuel onto a still burning fire... Or vinegar on the wound... Even if that also might work as a disinfectant, if you don't have anything better...
wangta wrote:
Message to Kurogane - do you remember Super Grover and all his trying to justify hiding his and his J wife's Canadian investments from the J taxman for years?
wagyl wrote:Sixteen pages and I still don't see where it doesn't say that the market value of an asset is the amount that the market will pay to buy the asset.
Sure, the market here is different to the market there, but if what you are saying is correct, then why are you not taking out loans to buy every second hand house you see: they are so cheap for the price and obviously undervalued that you cannot possibly lose.
If only there was a way to ship real estate across the Pacific to SoCal....
Hang on, wait, do I hear you saying on another thread that the construction standard is so crappy that they aren't worth anything anyway.....
wagyl wrote:You are correct that FGs are not the target here, we are just collateral damage. I actually doubt that the Tax Authority sees FGs as a particularly juicy source of income, but they are happy to take whatever flows past them on the way.
chokonen888 wrote:(imagine if it was...trying to explain to U.S. tax authorities that property in Japan has a negative value)
Seems like there are so many ways you can dispute their findings and once it's in dispute limbo, I don't see much happening on the Japan side.
chokonen888 wrote:I concede...besides the tax balance being tipped in Japan's favor, apparently my real issue with this all is the "taxation without representation" and being American, that mentality is hammered into me beyond repair.
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