参议院版本大漂亮来了,跨境汇款税基本砍没了?

众议院版讨论传送:众院通过版大漂亮法案对非美国公民国际电汇收税3.5%

相关内容在参议院版本388页,加了一条非常显著的例外:

提到的另外的法条在这里:

(A)an insured bank (as defined in section 3(h) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 1813(h)));
(B)a commercial bank or trust company;
(C)a private banker;
(D)an agency or branch of a foreign bank in the United States;
(E)any credit union;
(G)a broker or dealer registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78a et seq.);
(H)a broker or dealer in securities or commodities;

这个太大一坨了,我只能大胆猜测正常的上面提到的银行、信用社等等都subject。

我的理解是只要是正常的银行账户汇款,就不收税。精准打击西联汇款之类的?

作为参考,众议院版本的例外长这样:

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我只关心 pork 还在吗,还需要 kill bill 吗

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如果告诉我众议院版本里的pork具体在哪,我还能看看。要是让我自己找,您还是另请高明吧。 :yaoming:

看起来的确是精确打击了西联/moneygram这种

所以泥潭指定的fidelity汇款回国不影响?

金毛宫 说 该法案从来就没有 pork,只会 win

Orphan Cures Act would weaken the Medicare negotiation program by allowing more drugs to avoid price negotiation — a boon to pharmaceutical companies. This giveaway required the House to cut even deeper into Medicaid, sacrificing health coverage for pharma profits.

改了吗?

No tax on overtime 部分 改了吗?这个不改的话,以后基本工资都低, overtime payment 都高了,变成富士康吗?

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这个法案对普通打工人有点脱裤子放屁
按照泥潭的思路的话,给国外的家里人一张没有FTF的卡不就行了。除非大额往回转,但大额往回转干啥呢?

参议院版本专门豁免了debit card和credit card,意味着众议院版本可能被解读成刷卡也得交税。

Indian Lives matters!

原来是这样,我还以为只有汇款

如果不豁免,credit/debit card有点奇葩,消费也要多交5%

我尼玛这个标题笑尿了

转欧洲/香港/新加坡的账户的需求也是有的啊

senate过了 美国人民的好日子更近了一步

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只关心跨境汇款税。是主楼的版本被通过了吗?

看到新聞說包含公民都要被課稅

但看不太明白如何才能豁免

1%感覺也不少 :sweat_smile:

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不是说银行都豁免。。
精准打击WU

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source能发一下吗?想看看细节

紐約時報報導,在某些情況下可以豁免匯款稅,例如匯款資金來自於美國本地發行的信用卡(credit card)及金融卡(debit card),或者匯款資金來自美國國內銀行的帳戶存款。

銀行戶口/證券商戶口能免掉嗎 :yanjing:

那打擊的非法移民是因為他們沒有銀行戶口?

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The Senate’s version of the “one big, beautiful bill” includes a tiny, 1% tax on international cash transfers — called a remittance tax — which, according to experts, will have a major impact on immigrants working in the U.S.

A remittance is a money transfer to another country outside the U.S., which is a common practice among immigrant workers who send part of their wages back to family in their native countries. Tens of billions of dollars in remittances are sent to other countries from the U.S. every year.

Earlier versions of the bill included higher tax rates and specifically targeted illegal immigrants sending money outside the U.S. The current version of the “big, beautiful bill,” however, imposes a 1% fee only on cash transfers, not electronic transfers, sent to other countries. U.S. citizens who want to send cash to other countries will also be subject to the 1% tax.