steveinbsas
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What do you mean by the question: How is the legal way you are paying less taxes?
Was curious what specifically he does to pay less taxes.
I have no assets in my name in the USA and I live comfortably on my foreign "pension" income which is just below the minimum amout to pay income tax in Argentina. According to the accountant I asked in Punta Alta as well as the agent at AFIP, foreign pensions are subject to income tax in Argentina and that in Argentina the word "pension" includes funds paid to a retired individual by a government.Reading between the lines, I suspect the answer is lead a simple life and not accumulate more assets than necessary. That is probably the best way to pay less tax.
The only problem is that Argentine tax law changes (sometimes in a dramatic way), which can mean that the decision we take to come here based on one set of rules (that seem to favor us), can, in hindsight (after a dramatic change), appear to have been the wrong choice.
Since my arrival in May of 2006 there have been NO changes in the Argentine tax laws which have NOT worked in my favor.
I only had to pay the bienes personales on my apartment in Recoleta for three years 2006-2008 and after that the minimum amount subject to the tax was increased to a level which exceeded my assets in Argentina (and still does). There is now a huge exemption for the bienes personales if your domicile is the same as the property you own and the property which I bought in 2010 has always been appraised by ARBA for tax purposes far below its market value.
PS: When I was selling my apartment in Recoleta in 2009, I asked the accountant that was working with the escibano if what he was doing (paying the bienes personales on my behalf) was OK with AFIP, his answer was, "I am AFIP."
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