The Pressures of Privilege
The proposed New York pied-à-terre tax on luxury secondary properties has rattled a certain class of people, and the conversation has already moved in its usual circles: Monaco, Palm Beach, and the calculus of 183 days south of the Mason-Dixon Line. In this solo episode, Diana Oehrli asks the harder question: not whether you can leave, but what you're actually trading away if you do. Diana traces the real mechanics of tax exile: why Americans, unlike their European counterparts, cannot escape federal taxes by relocating abroad and why the grand escape most wealthy New Yorkers are actually contemplating runs from New York to Florida, not Monaco. She examines what 15% combined state and city tax genuinely buys if you choose to stay: the friends who knew you before money defined the room; the doctor who has kept you alive; the dojo where your sensei knows your body and your limits; the neighborhood where your children's memories were made. Drawing on William Penn's original conditions for colonial land grants (settlers had to physically occupy and build on their land within three years or lose it) and Hernando de Soto's principle that assets only generate value when embedded in a living system, Diana makes the case that wealth held in a tax haven is dead capital. Expensive storage. Nothing more. By the end of this episode, you'll understand how to read your own reasoning: whether the move is an act of stewardship or fear dressed up as financial planning. Only you can answer which one it is.
90 episodios
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