The USA has been making life difficult for Americans residing abroad; FATCA causes plenty of problems; but so does citizenship-based taxation. The IRS and Treasury department have made the reporting and taxation more onerous, and stepped up their collection efforts.
The result should be a surprise to no one: more and more Americans are handing in their US citizenship. Total numbers are unavailable (the lists published by the government include only a portion of the total), but undisputed is the fact that the numbers are increasing rapidly.
Having lots of citizens want to leave is...embarrassing. One solution could be to review the policies leading to people to hand in their citizenship. Another would be to make the fee unaffordable, especially for people living on second- or third-world incomes. It's obvious, of course, which route the USA has chosen: It now costs $2350 to hand in your US passport; more than 20 times the international average.
(Score: 1) by dltaylor on Wednesday December 03 2014, @04:41PM
Not so. The amount of tax collected by the other governments is deductible from the US-taxed income. Same with states within the US. California taxes are a line item on Schedule A (in California, for example, a portion of the vehicle license fees are a property tax; the amount you pay for that goes on "Other taxes" line).