steveinbsas
Registered
- Joined
- Jul 27, 2006
- Messages
- 10,512
- Likes
- 6,688
A&A said:I think immigration is a super complex issue and there is much more too it than just collecting taxes, especially from "perma-tourist" types that in the end may seem like a lot on this board, but is an infinitely small amount of people. (As opposed to say migrant workers from Bolivia et al.)
Until you have backpackers blowing up buildings, and vast hordes (I mean hordes) of US, Canadian, Euros doing the majority of manual labor, low paying jobs, i think the immigration policies will not be written with "perma-tourists" in mind.
How many do you really think there are? Now how many of those have these vast overseas treasure troves, or are in these lucrative careers that the government is trying to tap? Don't you think anyone with a well paying job would have the company they work for get them a visa? From what everyone has said on this board English teachers don't exactly make bank?
Yes, the law...blah blah blah. You've never sped in a car?
As one of my favorite quotes says: "If you like laws and you like sausages, never watch them being made" -Frederick the Great
I believe the new requirements for the visa rentista were indeed written with perma-tourists in mind, as well as those who already have the visa rentista and are not paying any taxes. The visa rentista doesn't really apply to Bolivians (migrant workers) in the first place. Backpackers are just tourists and will always be welcome 180 day a year.
The "powers that be" are probably well aware of pemra-tourists like Lee and qwerty who post (and boast) about living here on $30,000 USD per year (at the least) without having resident visas or paying income taxes in Argentina. Yes, Argentine migraciones has been soft on perma-tourists from the US and Europe, but it's their country after all. Perhaps they are tired of those who thumb their noses at the laws here. They are certainly not happy when foreigners don't pay the taxes they owe and AFIP has the bureaucracy in place to go after them (once they know who they are).
If you knew how aggressively AFIP goes after the handful of foreign residents (those without resident visas) when they want to sell their apartments here you might have a different point of view. It takes two to three months of red tape to get permission to sell, and now I understand they need to have an Argentine sign a document assuming responsibility for any taxes that might be assessed in the next ten(?) years.
Keep in mind that there is no "capital gains" tax on the sale of the property. The tax man is trying to collect taxes (about 30%) on "assumed" (undeclared) rental income as well as the often unpaid bienes personales taxes (1.25% plus 24% interest). They also check to see if the declared "sale price" of the property is "reasonable" so the government doesn't get cheated on the relatively small transfer tax (less than 3%).
I also believe that in the future migraciones will require proof of income tax payment from those renewing a visa rentista at the new $8000 pesos per person per month income level.