Back in 1863, a short story took the American reading public by storm.
Edward Everett Hale's The Man
without a Country told the
tale of a poor treasonous soul sentenced to spend the rest of his life
endlessly sailing the world in perpetual exile, as a prisoner aboard Navy
warships.
Today's awesomely affluent are just as transient — by choice.
Take Facebook co-founder Eduardo Saverin. This billionaire renounced his
Saverin has plenty of company. The number of Americans who formally renounced their U.S. citizenship
soared to 1,780 last year from 235 in 2008.
The spark for this surge? U.S. tax officials have been
clamping down on overseas tax evasion. This bit of unpleasantness has some
wealthy Americans, such as the Brazilian-born Saverin, cutting their ties to
dear old Uncle Sam.
They simply pay a $450 paperwork fee and an "exit tax" on unrealized capital gains, if they hold assets worth over $2 million or have paid over $151,000 to the IRS in any recent year.
They simply pay a $450 paperwork fee and an "exit tax" on unrealized capital gains, if they hold assets worth over $2 million or have paid over $151,000 to the IRS in any recent year.
But the affluent who've formally renounced their citizenship comprise
just a tiny share of what theFinancial Times has labeledthe
"stateless super rich." These uber-wealthy folks shy from the
notoriety of citizenship spurned. They just live their lives as if they have no
nation to call their own.
The most famous member of this stateless-by-choice community may be
Nicolas Berggruen, a 52 year-old "homeless billionaire" worth over
$2.3 billion who has spent the last decade hopping the world from
one five-star hotel to another.
But few of the stateless super rich settle for hotel suites. Most of
the vagabonding wealthy own personal residences. Lots of them. Typically, the Financial Times reported last month, a stateless super-rich
household will have one or two properties in their "country of principal
residence," another in London, New York, or some other "global
city," a "holiday home" in a warm climate, and maybe another pad
somewhere snowy.
Among the super rich, this perpetual-motion existence has become almost de rigueur, notes Jeremy
Davidson, a London
realtor who handles properties that run at least £10 million, the equivalent of
over $16 million.
"The more money you have," explains Davidson, "the more
rootless you become because everything is possible."
That rootlessness is keeping the price of luxury real estate soaring.
So far this year, in Manhattan
alone, four luxury co-op apartments have sold for over $30 million each, notes Crain's New York Business.
Just how many potential stateless super rich are currently roaming the
world? Late last year, the Singapore-based Wealth-X consulting firm put the
overall global number of people worth at least $500 million at about 4,650.
These super rich together hold an estimated $6.25 trillion in assets.
That's more than enough, note urban planners, to create havoc in the
hotspots where the stateless super rich most often gather. Their gentrification
on steroids supersizes prices for local products and services — and prices out
local residents in the process.
The massive mansions and apartments belonging to these homeless
billionaires can also exacerbate local housing shortages and constitute an
assault on any healthy sense of urban community. The super rich, as they flit
about, leave their properties unoccupied most of the year. The resulting
emptiness, notes Columbia
University sociologist Saskia Sassen, sucks the
neighborhood vitality out of great urban centers.
The super rich don't notice. Or care. They have no interest in putting
down roots. During their brief seasonal sojourns, they live in isolation from
the greater community around them. They venture out into local public life only
long enough to corrupt it with trinkets for local pols who promise to keep tax
rates toothless.
The stateless
protagonist in the classic short story Edward Everett Hale penned nearly 150
years ago desperately yearns to rejoin the society he so treasonously spurned.
Today's stateless super rich don't figure to display any similar yearning.
They're having too grand a time. At our expense.
Sam Pizzigati edits Too Much, the online weekly
on excess and inequality published by the Institute for Policy Studies.