[an error occurred while processing this directive] (none) [an error occurred while processing this directive] [an error occurred while processing this directive] [an error occurred while processing this directive]

[ Home - Directory - Who's who - Mailing Lists - About Us - Sitemap - Social Events ]
[ Alumni - Management - Feedback - With Frills - Frames ]


Re: swiss-list: Double Taxation Switzerland and USA / Social Security

DISCLAIMER: Any opinion expressed by a contributor is to be considered his/her own personal opinion, not the opinion of any other swiss-list member, the swiss-list website managers or the swiss-list committee.


[an error occurred while processing this directive]

Re: swiss-list: Double Taxation Switzerland and USA / Social Security

From: <click for textversion of email address >
Date: Wed, 14 Apr 2004 18:17:55 -0000
X-Mailer: TWIG 2.7.5

In addition, you can get a type of insurance where you also accumulate
capital and have a lump sum payment when the policy ends. If you do
this in CH you will able to accumulate capital while being insured.
Regards

Ralf

Dona Mommsen <dona.mommsen_at_gmx.net> said:

> Hi Laetitia and Ralf,
>
> I agree with Ralf that it is not worth paying AHV, but let me repeat
a reminder concerning IV / AI I sent earlier to another posting:
>
> Another question is what happens in case you become an invalid before
you retire. In this case gaps in your insurance will hurt, because they
shorten your pension according to the time you could have paid in since
you are 18. Example: If you are 30 when you become invalid and missed 2
years to pay invalidity insurance, they will shorten your payments by
2/(30-18)= 1/6, which is quite a lot.
>
> However, you cannot pay just the invalidity insurance and not the
AVS. Personally my husband and I decided to resign from AVS, as it is
simply quite expensive and very uncertain what you really get in 30
years time. We covered the 'gap' concerning invalidity with a private
life insurance: Lump sum payment in case of death, and a monthly payment
in case of invalidity. It is also quite expensive, but there you are
more flexible about what you think you would need in case of invalidity
and you know a bit better what you will get in the end.
>
> HTH
>
> Dona
>
>
> On Apr 13, 2004, at 7:09 PM, Ralf Kubli wrote:
>
> > Laetitia
> >
> > -AVS: you can only be dispensed from paying ss in the US if your >
employer pays for avs in switzerland. there is a form for this that >
your employer has to fill out. Usually this is done by large CH >
companies, (sulzer, abb, ubs, etc.) if you work for a US company or >
are not here as a transferee, you have to pay ss.
> >
> > -there is an agreement for the recognition of your ss payments if
you > ever return to CH. there should be plenty of information in the >
archive of the swiss list on this. in short: you pay ss in the US, >
for at least 18months, you return to CH and they recognize the years >
that you have contributed SS at 50% in CH.
> >
> > -I personally think you should save the money you pay into the AVS
> while in the us and invest it in CH, you can make some calculation >
that shows easily that you loose out on paying 9.something percent. >
Per year that you do not pay avs in CH you loose 1/42 (or whatever the >
required years of contribution are for a full benefit (rente). if you >
contribute in the US to ss and go back to CH, they count your >
contribution time at 50%, so you actually only loose 1/84 of your >
maximum benefit times the years you did not contribute in CH (as long >
as you pay SS).
> > If you can afford to pay the 9.6% (or what it is) of AHV on your >
pretax salary and pay Social security and live in Manhattan then I >
would like to know which company you work for and maybe they have a >
job for me...;))
> > Just make the rough calculation, you live 25 years after
retirement: > 65-90,
> > you don't pay avs in ch, and lose 2.3% of an assumed monthly
benefit > of 2000CHF= CHF46 lost per month X12=552x25=13800CHF lost of
AHV > payments per year you did not pay avs in CH. but this is money
paid > to you in 30 or 40 years over a 25 year period, so you discount
it > back to todays worth of money and you look at what you pay now:
let's > say you have an income of 50 K and pay 9.6% of pretax dollars of
> voluntary avs: $50000 x9.6%= 4800USD/per year you pay to Geneva.
> > If you take this money and put it in a decent investment today and
> wait until you are 65, it will be worth a lot more than the 13800CHF
> that you potentially loose over 25 years (if you happen to live 25 >
years after retirement, or if you still care what income you have with >
88 ;)) by not paying avs for a few years.
> >
> > Not to mention the fact that if you still believe the avs will
still > be looking the same in 30 years as it is now with the dramatic >
demographic changes happening, then you must have very strong faith in >
the swiss economy to be able to bear the burden of paying avs to all >
the old people without having any population growth by births or >
immigration.
> >
> > -every resident in the US has to pay taxes, unless you are not a >
resident, or work on a cash basis, which we can assume half of this >
city operates on and a large part of the country does as well.
> >
> > Check out the archive in swiss list on this subject as well.
> >
> > I am sorry if I have bored some of you again (if you even got that
far > reading) with the above elaborations, but as you can see, there is
> some reasoning behind not paying voluntary avs in CH while paying SS
> in the US.
> >
> > Regards
> >
> > Ralf
> >
> >
> > On Apr 12, 2004, at 16:07, Laetitia Hirschy wrote:
> >
> >> Hi,
> >>
> >> I understand that there are treaties between Switzerland and the
US, >> so that
> >> you don't have to pay social security in both countries. How does
>> this work?
> >> I currently live and work in NYC and pay social security here
(which >> is
> >> deducted from my salary at the end of each month) and AVS back at
>> home in
> >> Geneva. I'd like to know how I can go ahead and be exempt from
paying >> soc.
> >> sec taxes here and keep paying AVS in Switzerland since I intend
to >> go back
> >> to CH at some point? Is there any other taxes that we are exempt
>> from? I
> >> heard that Chinese citizens don't have to pay taxes in the US
because >> they
> >> have most-favored nation status with the US, do we have anything
like >> that?
> >>
> >> Thanks,
> >> Laetitia
> >>
> >>
> >

_______________________________________________
Swiss-list mailing list
Swiss-list_at_swiss-list.com
http://www.swiss-list.com/mailman/listinfo/swiss-list
Received on Thu Apr 15 2004 - 16:57:08 PDT

[an error occurred while processing this directive]