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They don't have the same meaning.Wanderer wrote:I think the term 'domiciled' and 'habitually resident' have the same meaning,
What are your intentions? Do you intend to spend the rest of your life living in the UK? Or do you expect to return to India to live at some time, for example on retirement?In my case I am a U.K permanent resident but still hold my Indian passport and the only home I own is in India. So I suppose my country of domicile is India since I was born and lived a good 20 years there as well.
You are dreaming, sorry. No such thing as a "world passport" or "world green card".ukbalaji wrote:I lived almost a decade in America and absolutely loved it there and never thought I would leave, but circumstances brought me to the U.K and I have been here now for 5 years.
I have a globally mobile career, and what I really want is to be a global citizen, have some kind of a world passport which will give me the freedom to to live and work anywhere as I please, without standing for "visa" in lengthy lines in the summer heat outside Western embassies in Indian metros. I know I dont want to go thru that treatment again. Some kind of a "world green card" is what I am after altho I guess I am dreaming
So it may be time for you to decide whether you want to make a commitment to the United Kingdom as your home..... The I.L.R is okay, but I cant work in E.U if I want to, and I dont have the freedom to go out of the U.K for 2 or 3 years without losing the I.L.R.
If you must think that way, then do a calculation to evaluate how much a British passport will help you in your career/life (global travel etc) and then set that against the loss of non-domiciled status in the UK.But if citizenship of one country is going to make me poorer, I would at least think twice before becoming a citizen.
Sorry, the system doesn't work like that. As a member of the British community you should be willing to recognise the importance of providing for those in the community who are perhaps less fortunate than you are.I see your point, but I can only speak for myself. I have not claimed a penny in benefits in the U.S or U.K, nor do I ever intend to. I dont want to rely on the state pension nor do I want to even claim it. I went to the NHS a single day in the last 5 years. I am single and at my age and with my busy career it is not easy to find a partner and I have come to accept that I will probably be single forever and probably wont have children who will go to free state schools.
Let me just say that I have contributed way more than my fair share of taxes, I would even go to the extent of saying it is high income single earners like me who contribute heavily to Gordon Brown's socialist state.
Emotive language does not alter the fact that in most western nations - including the United States, Canada, Australia and New Zealand, permanent residents are taxed on worldwide income.But my concern was regarding my other investments, in the U.S for instance. This was money *earned* in the U.S and never brought into the U.K. I do pay U.S tax on these which is well below 40%. I dont see *any moral obligation* whatsoever in paying 40 bloody % tax on these to the U.K. Why the heck should I ? There is no moral justification whatsoever. If other British Nationals in the same boat as me (with investments abroad) are coerced into doing so by Gordon Brown's socialist state, I would say it is unfair to them. But because they are getting robbed by nanny state does not mean I should be robbed as well.