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In reply to the discussion: More are renouncing U.S. citizenship as IRS cracks down [View all]dkf
(37,305 posts)Jeremie Le Febvre, the 30-year-old founder of private equity marketing-services firm TBG Capital Advisors, plans to move to Singapore from Paris this year.
Not because of President-elect Francois Hollandes pledge to boost taxes; rather for what Hollandes victory says about how wealth is viewed in France, the entrepreneur said.
Whats really driving my departure is the fact that I dont share the values that emerged during the election, the rejection of ambition and success, he said in an interview. Its part of Frances difficult relationship with money, but it has reached a new level. Even if its utopian, I need to believe for me and my descendants that the sky is the limit.
France, the fifth-richest country and home to some of the worlds wealthiest people, including LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton SA Chief Executive Officer Bernard Arnault, doesnt celebrate its affluent. Hollande, a Socialist who once said I dont like the rich, and who plans to slap a 75 percent tax on income of more than 1 million euros ($1.29 million), reinforces the sentiment that in France to be rich is not glorious.
Hollandes rhetoric against wealth and finance is prompting some in France to consider leaving, and European rivals are welcoming them. Bienvenue a Londres, or welcome to London, Mayor Boris Johnson quipped in January. Switzerland and Belgium have been just as warm.
http://mobile.bloomberg.com/news/2012-05-10/entrepreneurs-in-france-flee-from-hollande-s-rejection-of-wealth.html