They do emigrate, but generally to richer and not poorer places. Which is why you don't see too many of them in Europe and yes, Canada.
-
-
All it takes is one WSJ article followed by “AppAmaGooBookSoft / GoldmanEtcEtc: give us a list of any employee with a SSN not employed in the United States, their address on file, and the number of days they visited a US office in 2022.”
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
-
-
-
Yeah, I guess my view on this is somewhat colored by my own circumstances: we put actual economic roots down in the foreign jurisdiction, and I work for a company back in the US. It's a difficult needle to thread, but can be done.
-
Oh yeah, I totally buy that being a much more achievable life plan than historically. I don’t buy scaled durable abuse of e.g. “paper residency in Singapore but if I called the fire department it would definitely be in SF/NYC.”
- 5 more replies
New conversation -
-
-
Interestingly though, in the US there is so much disparity between what counties charge in tax, never mind states that if WFH grows in usage, I see an increase in people hoping over state & county lines - taxes more than commute times influencing housing decisions.
- 1 more reply
New conversation -
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.