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Bailing Out / Jumpin Ship


Gonzo the Face

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33 minutes ago, Fairynuff said:

Not true...the regulations are neither fair nor straightforward. There are rules as defined by the law but those rules are arbitrarily enacted according to the whim of every individual IO.

If there was any consistency, if the rules were the same everywhere and applied fairly there would be a lot fewer people leaving. If there was any logic to the rules, if there were sensible and valid reasons for them, that too would be ok.

 

I kind of get where you're going with this but let me offer a different perspective. 

 

If the regulations are defined by law, technically, it shouldn't matter how they enacted/enforced unless someone is going in the other direction and requiring 1 million baht in the bank instead of 800K, right? 

 

If the law says X and you decide you can move to Thailand but not meet X requirements because the laws are not enforced strictly, well, you're rolling the dice. 

 

I've seen so many threads over the last 10 or 15 years I've been reading TV about people living here for decades on tourist visas and when immigration makes even slightly more difficult people are like, "OMG, they're changing the rules on us."  No, you're residing in Thailand.  You're not a tourist.  You were breaking the rules and now they're enforcing them in a stricter manner. 

 

If you're referring to the new health insurance requirements, well, I agree that it was poorly rolled out and unfair to many.  However, it was a change to the visa requirements and, despite being poorly implemented, and unfair to some, not entirely surprising that Thailand would eventually require people in their golden years to have a means of paying their medical bills.  

 

Similarly, the changes to income verification, also hit a lot of people unfairly.  However, it should have seemed a little odd that you could just raise your right hand and declare you had a certain amount of income coming in.  I would have always assumed that loophole was going to get closed eventually.  Granted, immigration left most people with no good options to verify their income even if they legitimately had it, but they were obviously reacting to the rampant abuse. 

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On 12/21/2019 at 8:43 AM, Destiny1990 said:

I had young friends doing ED visas but it became to strict and so they left.

I had friends doing border runs they all left. 

Majority of long term stayers that I know including myself have left during these last years . Their number one reason that made them relocating is newer more strict visa rules,TM30’s and secondly nearby other countries becoming more attractive. In 5 last years only rules been created to discourage long term staying hence the exodus !

Seems it only got harder on you're friends because they were trying to live in Thailand on the wrongs visas. Unfortunately, Thailand is not as laid back as it used to be. 

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13 hours ago, yogi100 said:

Be real, Few people are ever gonna have the equivalent of $250k in assets and a pension or other income when they retire.

Many more than a few do but in my view that's not nearly enough to have a decent retirement in the USA unless it's a low cost area, the home is mortgage free,  and the pension is significantly higher than average. But that should still work in Thailand and a number of other "retirement visa" countries but as some have mentioned there are other potential deal breaker issues such as health insurance thing if it migrates to Os. 

 

4 percent "safe" withdrawal rate on 250K USD is 10,000 USD. Big whoop!

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5 hours ago, wwest5829 said:

What I am stating is  that I only have a government Social Security payment of $1293.00 USD per month that the US Embassy can verify from a government source. I am stating to any interested that I do not have any other “pension”. My funds are invested in the stock market and I am free to withdraw funds on my own decision amount. The US government does not have the right to verify how much I have available in total nor what I personally decide to withdraw. It is a different system than many European countries have in having only one government pension source. I am quite willing to state my retirement situation but please understand dealing with US citizen retirement would necessitate accessing thousands of records from various sources, which is forbidden under privacy rights laws.

 

I think you're confusing some things here. 

 

The US government has a right to verify how much you decide to withdraw (from dividends and capital gains).  It's called income.  The IRS is very much vested in verifying that amount. 

 

Unless you are drawing down the principle, your statement is is factually incorrect.  And if you are drawing down from your principle, that's not income.  

 

Even if you are drawing from something like a ROTH IRA or 401K (i.e. post-tax contributions), the IRS would be aware of that because there are required minimum distributions and they want to verify that you are taking the amounts coming out of tax-advantaged accounts.

 

What I think you mean to say is that the US embassy has no way of verifying that since they are not the IRS. 

 

It would be nice if the Thai government accepted some sort of IRS verification.  I can go to the IRS website and get copies of my income records but the embassy has no way to cross-reference them. 

 

They only need to verify what you reported as income on your 1040 form, so your statement about needing to verify thousands of sources is incorrect as well. 

 

And, having lived and worked in the EU, there is not only one source of pension.  Many EU citizens have public and private pension schemes too.  You can get a government pension and, if your company provides one, a private pension. 

 

So, so far, almost nothing you've stated is factually accurate. 

 

 

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21 minutes ago, Jingthing said:

Many more than a few do but in my view that's not nearly enough to have a decent retirement in the USA unless it's a low cost area, the home is mortgage free,  and the pension is significantly higher than average. But that should still work in Thailand and a number of other "retirement visa" countries but as some have mentioned there are other potential deal breaker issues such as health insurance thing if it migrates to Os. 

 

4 percent "safe" withdrawal rate on 250K USD is 10,000 USD. Big whoop!

 

You are dead-on.  If $250K seems like a large sum to you, you might need to reconsider retirement. 

 

I say that because living in a low cost of living country overseas has a lot of hidden costs.  US citizens cannot receive Medicare or Medicade in Thailand.  Something that would have provided you very low cost health insurance when your medical bills are, statistically speaking, expected to be the highest. 

 

And, actually, that $250K is not really $250K if you're exercising any sort of responsible financial planning.  First off, one would have a certain amount set aside as an emergency fund, sitting in cash, so you're not even investing the full $250K. 

 

So, you're not even drawing down $10K a year at a 4% SWR (savings withdrawal rate). 

 

I think a lot of people end up near retirement suddenly wake up and say, "Damn, based on my social security (or pension) and what I have saved up, I can live in some <deleted>hole here in my own country or move to Thailand (or some other low cost of living country) and think they can live like a king." 

 

And it all seems great if everything remains constant.  As long as the minimum financial requirements don't change, and the cost of living remains the same, and the stock market keeps roaring, and I never get sick or injured, and the baht vs my local currency stays the same, and I never meet someone and want to have a serious relationship, and, and, and, . . . I'll be fine. 

 

I used to caution people on Reddit about becoming digital nomads or retiring at 35, unless they built into their plans the fact that as we grow older, health related expenses would increase, exchange rates could wipe out 20% - 30% of their purchasing power, etc. 

 

Nobody in their 20's or 30's likes hearing that dose of reality either. 

 

Literally, there were people who would say things like, "I work out 5x a week and eat a plant-based diet so I don't think I need to worry about health insurance." 

 

I guess Go Fund Me is the Millennial health insurance plan.   

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On 12/21/2019 at 10:45 AM, Thailand said:

Seriously, we are among those looking to liquidate all Thai assets so they should it be necessary we can opt out. Where is obviously a major concern.

We also have friends going the same route.Like it here but need to be more flexible should it be necessary to opt out

You too, Thailand? With your moniker, you should be the last to leave. :smile:

All the best 

Edited by daveAustin
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5 hours ago, digibum said:

You are dead-on.  If $250K seems like a large sum to you, you might need to reconsider retirement.

I'm 64 and spend $15k/year.

$250k would last me 17 years, I'd be OK with that.

I don't know anyone in Thailand who survived age 70.

 

My emergency planning is 1) Death, 2) Return to the UK or France.

Edited by BritManToo
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41 minutes ago, holy cow cm said:

Well we are all entitled to our opinions, but word is and actions are we are being hit out at. The restrictions we have over us like having PR's almost impossible to get along with citizenship or the categories of what we can do or not are atrocious. TM30 check-in and 90 day reporting and the new insurance regulation which derives out of false data for expats is just more then more then more. OI have been here a long long time but the writing is clearly on the wall.

If you believe those things, extrapolate and tell us what the intention is and where it will take us in say five or seven years. In your mind are they trying to get rid of all expats or just Western expats and if so why? On the one hand some posters tell us that government cannot afford to lose all expats because of the loss it would cause to the economy. On the other hand some say government is trying to get us all out....which is it?

Edited by saengd
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2 minutes ago, Sheryl said:

Indeed one of the main idsues with the new Health Insurance requirement is that people over 75 can't get policies.

The main issue I have with the insurance policy is I don't want to waste my money.

75 isn't an age I ever expect to reach, at 64 I've already beat my parents (who both died of cancer in their early 60s).

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1 minute ago, BritManToo said:

The main issue I have with the insurance policy is I don't want to waste my money.

75 isn't an age I ever expect to reach, at 64 I've already beat my parents (who both died of cancer in their early 60s).

It would be ironic if you live to be 75 and then have to leave Thailand because you can't get health insurance and your visa application was denied!

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9 minutes ago, Sheryl said:

Don't count on it.

 

Lots of people libe to an age they did not expect to reach.

 

And most people nowadays live much linger than their patents did. Lifespans ate increasing.

 

My mother's patents died before 60. She is niw 90 and going strobg.

 

And the "I'll kill myself when I reach age X" bunch generally change their minds or keep upping the age.

 

Beware of plans that assume how long you'll live. Lots of elderly people end up ill served by them.

Plant based diet and lots of sex.

Live forever!

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40 minutes ago, BritManToo said:

The main issue I have with the insurance policy is I don't want to waste my money.

75 isn't an age I ever expect to reach, at 64 I've already beat my parents (who both died of cancer in their early 60s).

 

Yes, but the thing I don't think you're fully appreciating is that Thailand doesn't want to gamble with you on this issue.  How outraged would you be if your visa included them doing physical and a history check of your relatives so they could estimate how quickly you would die.  Bend over if cough if you want your 1 year extension.  LOL

 

Like Sheryl said, there are a lot of people that go on well past 70 and into their 80's living here. 

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46 minutes ago, saengd said:

If you believe those things, extrapolate and tell us what the intention is and where it will take us in say five or seven years. In your mind are they trying to get rid of all expats or just Western expats and if so why? On the one hand some posters tell us that government cannot afford to lose all expats because of the loss it would cause to the economy. On the other hand some say government is trying to get us all out....which is it?

Not a belief. I have Thai friend who has an immigration old university friend and the anti foreigner sentiment is high and festering. Xenophobia is marching. Think of it this way: Start clear cutting on the lower end and then make the middle to high end jump as high as they can and the ones who can't jump high enough will be forced out. Don't believe one bit they care about any Western expats. Just care about not getting a bad rap on the world stage. They need the tourism dollars but do not want the multiple comers and goers and comers so are opting to see how to bring in new fresh tourism income. Ofcourse they do not want all of us out, but they who they see as repeat offenders or not enough money to their liking or maybe acclimated to being Thai enough no. Only want a select few who can stay under their scheme of criteria. In 5-7 years who knows. Initiatives can backfire and then reversed, but I don't know how long we all will be able to hang on. For the insurance, I do see it going to Non O so I will purchase it sometime this year or before I am 60 and never use it.. This really all started to turn when Thaksin was in office. They are just following it through. So, honestly they want to see S E Asian faces probably more than the Westerners. And they are the you know who already. They are wealthy to begin with. 

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