How Rich People Hide Their Money

– The US Department of Treasury estimates that the ultra wealthy in America are skipping out on more than $160 billion worth of taxes every year, – And we know that number is impossible to imagine. So compare that to the roughly 48 billion that Penn Wharton budget model estimates the US will be spending each year for the next decade on student debt relief. An extra 160 billion could go a long way. – So how did a rich get away with it? Well, most of us are taxed on our income. We go to work, we earn a paycheck. A percentage of each paycheck goes back to the government to spend on programs and infrastructure, and we use the rest to buy groceries, pay bills, and score Beyoncé tickets. – The ultra wealthy though, don’t earn much of their income from a paycheck. Instead, they grow their wealth through investments, and it’s only when they sell those investments that they actually owe taxes on them. – That is, if they don’t find some clever loopholes first. (playful music) – One way that the rich hide their money is by literally hiding it. Secret Swiss bank accounts or shell companies in the Cayman Islands sound like the stuff of heist movies, but some wealthy people do use foreign accounts to shield their money from the IRS’s irises. – These tax havens are attractive places to stash cash and maybe not tell the US government that it’s there. First, a wealthy person or maybe their financial advisor will find a country that collects low or no taxes on foreign funds stored there. But foreign banks are still supposed to report to the US on foreign accounts held by individual US citizens. So instead of putting an account in their own name, a rich person could form a fake company that doesn’t really do anything and open accounts in that company’s name. Popular tax haven countries like Panama and Luxembourg, will look the other way, while these anonymous company owners move money in and out of their accounts without reporting it to the IRS, – But like we all learn from the Wolf of Wall Street, this is pretty illegal. US law requires that citizens report all of their assets, even if they’re stored abroad. So if the IRS catches you keeping secret foreign investments, you could get in pretty big trouble. – Lucky for the rich, there are totally legal tax havens right here in the US. In addition to the taxes we pay to the federal government, the states, and even cities we live in, can collect taxes too. So a state might collect income taxes on the money we earn, capital gains taxes on the money we make from investments, sales taxes on things we buy and property taxes on the value of our homes. But all states decide this mix a little differently. – Some states, like Washington, don’t collect an income tax at all, and I’m sure it’s just a coincidence that billionaires like Bill Gates and Jeff Bezos have lived there for decades and eight states, including Nevada, Texas, and Florida, don’t tax capital gains either. Wealthy people who want to pay the least amount of taxes may choose to live in a state that doesn’t tax their income and investments. – In 2021, Washington State passed a law that allowed them to collect capital gains tax for the first time. Now, anyone who makes more than $250,000 selling investments, would owe the state 7% of anything they earn after that first 250 K. – So what did Jeff Bezos, who makes billions a year selling Amazon stock, do? He moved to Florida, where he’ll keep $610 million in his pocket this year by avoiding Washington’s tax on his investment gains. – For people who don’t wanna play where in the world is Carmen San Diego with their dollars, there’s another strategy that wealthy people use called buy, borrow die. Remember that we don’t get taxed on our investments as they grow. It’s only when we sell them that we get taxed, and that’s why the ultra wealthy just don’t sell. Instead, when they need to buy a new spaceship, they can take out loans using their investments as collateral. – Back in 2020 when we knew Elon Musk mostly as that eccentric electric car guy, he held $548 million in personal loans. That’s the money he actually used to pay for utility bills, shop for groceries, or most likely pay other people to do those things for him, while the rest of his wealth was tied up in Tesla stock. – He did this again in 2022, securing $13 billion in loans that he used to buy Twitter. But because these billions are in loans, not income, Musk and other super rich investors don’t have to pay taxes on that cash. – So the rich buy investments and let them grow, then borrow against those investments to fund their lifestyles. But what’s the die part? – If you buy stock for $10, hold onto it for decades until it grows to be worth a thousand dollars, and then die without ever selling it, whoever you choose to inherit your estate can sell that investment, – But thanks to a tax rule called the step-up in basis, your heir doesn’t owe taxes on the full $990 that your investments grew while you were alive. Instead, $1,000 becomes the new starting value. And if your heir later sells the stock for $1,200, she only pays taxes on the $200 it grew after you died. – By using the buy borrow die strategy, nobody has to pay taxes on all the capital gains that happen during your lifetime at all, which is how some of the wealthiest people in the country managed to amass billions while barely paying taxes on any of it. – But sometimes the rich do need to turn their mega investments into cash. They have some creative ways to hide that money too. Whenever they make money selling an investment that grew, the rich might also look for losses. That might mean selling off investments that are losing money at the same time. – Any money you lost gets subtracted from what you gained, and you only pay taxes on what is left over. If you have a lot of losses in one year, you can even wait to count those losses against income you have in the future. This strategy called tax loss harvesting helps rich people sell their investments at a profit, while making it look like they didn’t really walk away with much. – Wealthy people can also find losses by structuring their fancy hobbies as businesses, whether it’s training race horses, owning a sports team, developing luxury real estate, or buying a social media platform. The ultra wealthy can afford to start or buy businesses that they don’t actually expect to live off of. So when those businesses lose money, it can actually be a good thing. – In the 1980s and nineties, when Donald Trump was just a wealthy real estate developer, he reported over a billion dollars of losses from his hotels, casinos, and apartment buildings in a single decade. – His tax returns dating back to 1985, showed that those business losses got subtracted from his income and investment gains, lowering the total he had to pay taxes on, sometimes to zero, all while getting to live in a gold-plated penthouse apartment. – ProPublica found that between 2014 and 2018, the 25 richest Americans paid only 3.4% in taxes on their total wealth increase. Meanwhile, the median American household pays about 14% of their total income. While this may seem crazy, strategies like buy, borrow, die, and tax loss harvesting are perfectly legal ways to hide your wealth, – There have been attempts to close some of these tax loopholes. In 2022, president Biden proposed that Americans with over $100 million in wealth would have to pay a 20% tax on their investment growth, even before those investments are sold. – [Julia] And senators like Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren introduced a bill in 2021 that would’ve eliminated these step up in basis rule that allows people to inherit a lifetime of gains tax free. – Still, none of these plans have been enacted into law. Legislators are still debating how to close these tax loopholes or whether to close them at all, but the ultra wealthy don’t seem too worried because the longer it takes us to figure it out, the more their hidden wealth continues to grow. – And that’s our two cents. – And that’s our two cents. – [Katie] Thanks to our patrons for keeping Two Cents financially healthy. Click the link in the description to become a Two Cents patron. (soft music)

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The Treasury Department estimates that the ultra-wealthy are skipping out on over $160 BILLION of taxes every year. The methods they use can be shady, but many are perfectly legal.

Two Cents is hosted by Philip Olson, CFP® and Julia Lorenz-Olson, AFC®
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sources:
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/tax-evasion-billions-offshore-fatca-tax-reporting-loophole-senate-finance-committee-robert-brockman/
https://www.cnbc.com/2024/02/12/jeff-bezos-move-to-miami-will-save-him-over-600-million-in-taxes.html
https://www.cnbc.com/2021/09/09/top-one-percent-dodge-billions-in-annual-taxes-treasury-estimates.html
https://www.ed.gov/news/press-releases/us-department-education-estimate-biden-harris-student-debt-relief-cost-average-30-billion-annually-over-next-decade#:~:text=The%20Department%20estimates%20that%20one,loan%20payments%20in%20January%202023.
https://www.npr.org/2022/08/25/1119412217/how-the-ultrawealthy-devise-ways-to-not-pay-their-share-of-taxes
https://www.propublica.org/article/billionaires-tax-avoidance-techniques-irs-files
https://www.propublica.org/article/the-secret-irs-files-trove-of-never-before-seen-records-reveal-how-the-wealthiest-avoid-income-tax
https://www.vox.com/money/23634085/biden-2024-budget-billionaire-tax-capital-gains
https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/briefing-room/2022/03/28/presidents-budget-rewards-work-not-wealth-with-new-billionaire-minimum-income-tax/#:~:text=The%20Billionaire%20Minimum%20Income%20Tax%20will%20ensure%20that%20the%20very,lower%20than%20teachers%20and%20firefighters.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/elon-musk-techs-cash-poor-billionaire-11588967043?mod=hp_lead_pos11
https://www.vanhollen.senate.gov/news/press-releases/van-hollen-leads-colleagues-in-announcing-new-legislation-to-close-the-stepped-up-basis-loophole
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2019/05/07/us/politics/donald-trump-taxes.html

44 Comments

  1. That Step up in Basis rule is astonishingly terrible. Here in Canada the capital gains are considered realized at death and the estate has to pay the taxes before distributing to the heirs (except to a spouse – things can be transferred directly to a spouse but the cost basis doesn't change). It makes for messy planning when someone wants to pass down the family cottage, but at least the taxes get paid.

  2. You know that normal people are allowed to use tax loss harvesting to their advantage as well? Or die with stocks that can be given to family members? These are benefits that can help the 99% too if we chose to use them

  3. I lost over $70k when everything started to tank. Not because I was in an exchange that went belly up. I was just stupid to hold and because that's what everyone said. I'm still responsible. It just taught me to be a better investor now that I understand more of what could go wrong. It took me over two years of being in the market, I'm really grateful I found one source to recover my money, at least $10k profits weekly. Thanks Patricia Annie Brooks.

  4. If you are not in the financial market space right now, you are making a huge mistake. I understand that it could be due to ignorance, but if you want to make your money work for you…prevent inflation

  5. To be fair, it's good that states compete in these different ways. I can understand why people would want to get rid of "buy-borrow-die" but tax loss harvesting is a good way to encourage businesses to continue developing, we already have enough of an issue with short-term mindset with businesses, getting rid of loss harvesting would exacerbate it even more. Ofc being funded by PBS they'd all be called tax loopholes when some of these aren't really even wealth hiding strategies like loss harvesting, seeing as they had to lose the money before getting it back, if anything that's breaking even, because they're gaining back money lost previously while the business was smaller, it's basically saying they won't be taxed on income when they haven't broken even overall yet and IDK why anyone would disagree with that when anyone with stocks can do something similar up to like $3,000 a year.

  6. Why do we care about other people's wealth when we get to use their Macbooks to order Prime products and drive their Tesla to go buy some Starbucks and shop at Target? Sounds like they are keeping the economy going unlike what our government is trying to do. This channel is so biased toward more government and that's not good for my wallet.

  7. Question: How many of these things can we (as in, normal Americans making, say, sub-100k/year) do? Like, theoretically, I assume we could do most. But practically, why aren't we doing these things? Is it upfront costs? Is it purely education/knowing about these things? Is it a time factor? Are there other barriers to entry that I'm not qualified to even think about/realize? Is the IRS better able to see when people with less money jump/miss a loophole because the finances are more straight-forward (thus an audit is much easier)?

  8. I used to love this channel. This whole video feels like an ad for Joe Biden.

    If you are going to attack certain people directly, maybe you could also mention the fact that Elon Musk has also paid more taxes than any other person ever.

  9. I think there is nothing wrong with this, if you run a business a lot of things become clear as to why laws are the way they are. But at least now you know the game, just play it the right way and you should be able to reap the benefits too. It simply comes down to 3 things, expenses are not taxed, debt provides liquidity for your hard assets, use that debt wisely and grow your hard assets for which you can get more liquidity for. In its most simplest form, if you bought a car and recieved a $30,000 car loan from the bank, you would be mad if you got taxed on it right, it would be unfair so using that as the basic premise. If you got a loan against an asset you should also not get taxed on it. So how do you get hard assets that start from nothing, either work hard and invest for a long time so you hard assets grow in value or build a business from zero to millions/billions in value. The problem is, most people get a loan and use it to consume, not use it to build things that will make them wealthier so they just get mad that the wealthy dont pay taxes when really its just how things work and it actually cant be change cause if it was, it would be bad for everyone including the less wealthy

  10. FBAR should be a crime. Literally only two countries do this, the U.S. and Eritrea. And the UN & EU went after Eritrea for doing it. U.S. does it and the world stays silent. Abolish the income tax!

  11. Taxation is legalized theft. No one should pay taxes in the first place. USA was born in part to get rid of the taxes imposed by a tyrannical government. Now the modern government has brainwashed people to believe that taxation is some sort of duty. It's all BS. They coerce you to pay like a mafia, and send you to jail of you don't using the monopoly of the armed forces they possess.

  12. Hallelujah!!!! The daily jesus devotional has been a huge part of my transformation, God is good 🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻was owning a loan of $ 47,000 to the bank for my son's brain surgery (David), Now I'm no longer in debt after I invested $12,000 and got my payout of m $ 270,500 every months,God bless Christy Fiore🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸..

  13. Ahh these two sound like commies that hate the rich lol. If it wasn’t for the rich; many of the have nots wouldn’t get entitlements they dont deserve. But you know what I did? I worked and invested in index funds to start my generational wealth. Well the commies are making tons of money from yourube lol.

  14. Re: Buy Borrow Die, do loans have to be settled when the person dies? Are they paid with heirs' assets after Step Up in Basis? I always wonder about this.

  15. Now show us the justification where its 100% legal for politicians to do insider trading but an average consumer could spend life in prison for doing the same

  16. If you are not in the financial market space right now, you are making a huge mistake. I understand that it could be due to ignorance, but if you want to make your money work for you… prevent inflation

  17. I understand that that the rich use their investments to borrow money for their daily expenses but u failed to explain how they pay those loans back. Don’t they have to make payments on those loans? Where does THAT money come from?

  18. Unlike most videos of this tipe what you said is mostly true. I would have to go into fine detail to explain the minor flaws.

    One thing you did not go into that everyone gets wrong is the rich don't draw an incom from their CEO job not to pay income taxes which is very illegal.

  19. FYI… enyone can do this! It's the same thing as a back door roth! It's not just for the rich! Please! If you believe this you're just as financially unintelligent as most people. They talk about the TOP 25 people… please! You want to talk about the top 1%? Well if you make more that 30k a year that you are part of the 1% of all people that make a yearly income. PLEASE PEOPLE DON'T JUST WATCH OR READ WHAT YOU SEE. DO YOUR OWN RESEARCH! I don't care if I catch smoke because my household income is 100K. Facts are facts. If you disagree call Dave Ramsey! 🤷🏽‍♂️

  20. i dont get how financing lifestyle with loans dodges taxes, you still have to payback loans by selling investments eventually. I get that you want the investment to grow at a higher rate of return than the loan but im missing something here.

  21. Does seem like annual interest on those loans would eventually overtake the one time savings in taxes if they were doing this for 20 to 40 years until they died. Did this only work back when interest was super low?

  22. The only thing that you guys fail to state is that these techniques are available to ALL Americans, not just the uber wealthy

    As someone who came from humble beginnings with very little, I've educated myself and take advantage of all of these strategies…..

  23. Do any of the proposed methods to close the loopholes not pull the ladder? Taxing unrealized gains is just like how propertyy taxes prevent generational wealth below the threashold from accumulating stunting social mobility.

  24. Conflating weath and income, I see…….. the government still gets the rich to pay or it wouldn't generate 4.4 trillion in revenue. According the the IRS only 1/3 of the revenue is for income tax. And on top of it only 3% of revenues are paid by those making 100k or less. Like every thing else maybe we should focus on something more important.

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