book presents in-depth yet practical information on the most important issues concerning residence and citizenship planning for private clients. It is designed as a guide for private client advisers such as law firms, tax consultants, private banks and family offices. It is of course also addressed directly to private individuals and families, business owners, entrepreneurs and investors who are interested in finding out more about the various issues of interest to them.
The use of concise and precise language reflects its character as a handbook and reference source. In particular, the authors have endeavored to express the terms and concepts involved as transparently as possible in order to make them easily accessible even to those without a legal background. Footnotes are therefore mostly avoided where possible for the sake of clarity.
This book can in no way substitute legal, investment or other advice. The publisher and authors therefore unreservedly exclude any liability for losses or damages of any kind – be these direct, indirect or consequential – which may result from the use of this book or the information it contains. Although the publisher and authors have undertaken great care in preparing this book, they obviously cannot guarantee its correctness and completeness, and the explanations and strategies contained herein may not be suitable for your situation.
Any comments and suggestions, praise and criticism will be gratefully received. If you as the reader feel that a particular topic should be removed or added to this volume, please let us know. Any useful information we will be happy to recompense with a complimentary copy of the next edition of this book.
Christian H. Kälin is a Partner at Henley & Partners in Zurich and one of the pioneers and leading authorities in international residence and citizenship planning.
Patrick Weil is a Professor at University of Paris-Sorbonne and one of the leading academics in the field of international and comparative citizenship.
Marshall Langer is a Professor at Thomas Jefferson School of Law and recognized as the most experienced U.S. tax attorney specialized in expatriation and international taxation.
Simon Anholt is an independent policy advisor who helps governments develop and implement strategies for enhanced economic, political and cultural engagement.
About Henley & Partners
The production of this book has been made possible by the generous sponsorship of Henley & Partners.
Residence and citizenship planning are terms which were coined by Henley & Partners more than fifteen years ago when, at that time, most international lawyers and wealth planning professionals were not considering the subject to be of much relevance.
Over the years, Henley & Partners has emerged as the only global firm specialized and focused in this particular area of practice. International residence and citizenship planning has itself become a major topic among the increasing number of internationally mobile entrepreneurs as well as many wealthy individuals and families, who are increasingly prepared to look at alternative residence and citizenship solutions.
Lawyers such as Christian H. Kälin, who initiated this book, as well as many others, further developed the discipline together with an entire group of specialists who now work together at Henley & Partners. The firm’s Chief Executive Officer, Eric G. Major, who formerly built the most important Canadian immigrant investor business at HSBC, is another guiding light in the area of global residence and citizenship planning.
Today, individual clients as well as other advisors and law firms worldwide rely on Henley & Partners for specialized advice and assistance in this delicate area where its expertise and experience are second to none.
The firm’s renowned Residence and Citizenship Practice Group has been advising private clients, their close advisors such as lawyers and private bankers as well as governments on investor immigration and citizenship solutions. Henley & Partners is in contact with the government authorities of the relevant countries and constantly monitors the worldwide situation. The firm also assists in designing, implementing and operating investor immigration programs and gives relevant advice to governments.
Besides advising clients on the possibilities of acquiring resident status, permanent residence and citizenship by investment, members of the Planning Group advise them on the (re-) acquisition of citizenship based on ancestry as well as on residence planning for private clients with a view to tax optimization and/or post-immigration citizenship acquisition.
Residence planning and related tax planning for private clients involves finding solutions for individuals and families who move internationally, own property in different countries and who often have complex international situations and requirements. In this regard, they work closely together with the firm’s Trust and Tax Planning Group, and our combined services cover not only tax, immigration and citizenship law, but also international private law, real-estate structuring and more.
For many years, Henley & Partners has organized the Global Residence and Citizenship Conference, which is the most important such event in the world. It is held annually in mid-November in different locations each year. To check for the program of the next conference and to benefit from early registration discounts, please visit www.henleyglobal.com/events
For more information about the firm please visit www.henleyglobal.com
Acknowledgements
This work arose from the idea and need for a first-rate, up-to-date and useful handbook on residence and citizenship options for private clients. It was forward-thinking pioneers like U.S. tax attorneys Professor Marshall Langer and Stephen Gray who have started to systematically plan for wealthy clients in terms of their residence and citizenship requirements, and have thus helped form the basis of this increasingly important field of private client advisory work.
While there have been many different publications in the past, mainly information brochures, nothing of this kind, and in particular of this level of professional accuracy, has been attempted before. The publisher, Ideos Publications Ltd, concurred with this idea. Together with the author, they are now pleased to present the result to interested readers.
A great deal of specialist knowledge, work and effort has gone into this project, and it has certainly proved worthwhile. As an expression of its overall concept, this volume can unquestionably be seen as a pioneering achievement. The author and publisher hope that our readers share this viewpoint as well as our enthusiasm for the project.
Certainly this book will be useful for many lawyers, private bankers, immigration specialists, tax planners and other private client advisors, but also governments and government agencies – they all require first-hand information in this increasingly important field. We are convinced that with this book we are making an important contribution in the advancement of private wealth planning.
No great book is created without the contribution of a great team supporting it, and this book, though it may not be great, is no exception. At this point, I would like to thank all those who have contributed to and supported this book. Special thanks are due to my colleagues at Henley & Partners and Ideos Publications, in particular Micha-Rose Emmett, Ulrike Trux and Lisette Odenthal, as all of them made a tremendous effort to help me produce this book. Furthermore I also thank the coauthors and the publisher, as well as the main sponsor, Henley & Partners. Thanks to their valuable support, they have also contributed significantly to the successful publication of this book.
Zurich, November 2011
Christian H. Kälin
Foreword
They say the world is getting smaller and more interconnected every day. Indeed, the effects of globalization continue to expand and touch all aspects of our modern