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Source: Quora
Firstly, you have to be much more motivated overseas.
It is true that you can get paid more, and pay less tax, in numerous industries as an expat.
Yet you don’t usually have these things:
The average person in the UK, even somebody who is very bad at saving and investing, often has to go into auto-enrollment, needs to pay national insurance and has a mortgage.
Even the government’s official figures show that up to half the population could have private pensions of 1million or above at age 65, now we have gone away from final salary schemes and towards defined benefits.
Therefore, what you need to do is be very aggressive. Invest much more than you would have done in the UK.
Other tips I can give are:
Also, focus on investing in portable investment plans. As an expat, you might move from country to country.
You need to create something which will move with you, as it reduces the chances of capital gains taxes and other things.
Source: Quora
Many people are obsessed with gross salary, but taxes and cost of living can be key for people who want to save money.
The US is quite unique amongst developed countries in that it still taxes expats living overseas above $108,700.
For most expats, or for the record number of Americans who renounce citizenship every year for tax reasons, it is possible to change residency and legally pay 0% tax.
If a British person, or American who is now (legally speaking) an ex-American, moves to Monaco, the UAE, Saudi Arabia or many other places, a 0% rate of tax can be applied, assuming you don’t retain too many ties to your home country.
Some territorial tax countries in South East Asia and beyond also don’t tax overseas income, making a 0% rate possible in some situations.
Even if we ignore the potential tax benefits, there is a huge difference between cost of living.
In some parts of Eastern Europe, Latin America and South East Asia, you can live a decent middle-class life for $1,500-$3,000 a month, depending on the location and your lifestyle.
In certain parts of California or NYC you can’t even rent a box for that amount of money.
For people with private businesses, moreover, it can be easier to make more money in overseas markets which are less competitive.
Finally, you have the “hardship” element. If you are an engineer in oil&gas, already earning decent money, it is unlikely you would take a position in Iraq or another war zone unless the pay was much better.
However, in the real world, many expats don’t save and invest more. Back home, there is often a compulsory nature to investing.
This is true in many European countries, but is also true in the US and Canada.
People often invest into government and private schemes because it is the path of least resistance.
When people go overseas, often they need to save and invest by themselves, which relies on some self-motivation.
Source: Quora
Dubai, and the UAE in general, is built on short-term expats coming and leaving.
Most come for a few years. A few last 10–20 years. Even fewer last “forever”.
So until recently, I think the answer was technically no. It wasn’t easy for people to retire in the UAE, even if it was possible maybe in some situations, like if you married a local.
There has been reforms made recently which will make it easier to do this, and even maybe get citizenship of the UAE.
The one big thing that might change in the next few years is tax rules which could disincentivize living in places like the UAE.
First, we have had the minimum corporate tax proposal by the US and its treasury secretary, Janet Yellen, which has been on the cards at the OECD level for two years:
That could raise the tax levels for companies in the UAE, depending on the details.
Even if it only affects the big boys to start with, it could eventually affect everybody if it comes in.
Second, we have had countries like South Africa and China going (de facto) for US-style citizenship-based taxation by the back door.
More countries like the UK could follow suit, or there could be OECD proposals.
What starts as a global minimum corporate tax could become:
If those things come in, the incentives to permanently reside in the UAE would go down.
Right now, all a British person with a private entity needs to do to legally reduce most forms of taxes to zero is to move to a place like the UAE, Monaco and many others, and incorporate the business there.
If that changes and there would be minimum taxes, the incentives to move with be fewer.
Remember too, that these new rules would also create hassles due to the regulations that would come with the taxes.
So, even people who wanted to remain for non-tax reasons might find themselves being asked for loads of extra paperwork by government authorities, banks etc.
When the US bought in the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) regulations that is exactly what happened.
Even people who didn’t care about the rules when they first came out because “they don’t mind being transparent”, soon complained when their banks asked for extra forms, and they were restricted from investing in certain products.
How can it be possible to continually hit all time highs in the stock market during a pandemic?
I am not sure when this question was first asked, but I would make numerous points.
Firstly, as I have said numerous times, historically markets have increased during pandemics.
Markets have usually increased in any case (the S&P500 has risen on about 72% of years and fallen 28% of the times), so I am not saying that they rose in these cases due to the pandemics. They might have increased in spite of the pandemics.
Remember too, that World War One was between 1914–1918. So, the Spanish Flu happened during this event, and markets did relatively OK.
As the Pearson Institute has said (link below):
“To put it much too bloodlessly, we have run a bunch of natural experiments on market reaction to changes in perceived security risk.
Even large-scale conflict and the tides of history rarely change who is rich, and that is probably a large reason why stock markets do not respond to geopolitical risk very much
There is zero academic evidence which links falling stock markets to events like pandemics, wars, government shutdowns, elections (look at rising markets in 2016 and 2020 which few expected”.
There is also little or no correlation between GDP growth and markets. US markets had their worst period in the last decade in 2018, when the economy performed best.
It is true that markets can sometimes panic unexpectedly. They panicked during the first lockdown (Feb/March 2020) but not during the second European lockdowns in October/November.
They didn’t panic during the 2000 or 2020 disputed elections, or during the unexpected election result in 2016, but that doesn’t mean they never will.
The point is, that doesn’t mean some kind of causation or predictor of future events.
Besides, the economy is now strong in some of the biggest economies in the world like the US.
The recovery is far quicker than 2008–2009 even though the original shock was bigger.
So, even if there was a correlation between GDP and stocks, the economy is now back, and the pandemic seems to be coming to an end (but who knows) in most developed countries which are vaccinating people.
I know it sounds hard to believe that a lot of market movements are random, and can’t be predicted, but that is what the evidence shows.
That is one reason of many why it is better to just invest when you have money and forget about it.
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Adam is an internationally recognised author on financial matters, with over 252.7 million answers views on Quora.com and a widely sold book on Amazon
Further Reading
In the answer below, taken from my online Quora.com answers, I spoke about the following issues and topics:
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