Bezos Reaps Florida Tax Benefit With $4B Amazon Share Sale

Jeff Bezos, founder and CEO of Amazon

Miami especially has become a magnet for the ultra-rich and their businesses thanks to its low taxes and high quality of life. Several finance moguls, such as Ken Griffin and Josh Harris, have moved to the region in recent years, while Texas has also seen an influx of the wealthy from higher-tax states such as California and New York.

Washington’s capital gains tax could “disincentivize people to come here or incentivize them to leave,” said Aaron Johnson, tax counsel with Lane Powell, a law firm that challenged the capital gains tax in court. “Anybody who has the wherewithal and the ability to create tax efficiencies will.”

Like Florida, Washington state has no income tax. The capital gains tax was proposed as a way to capture some of the wealth concentrated in the state — which is home to corporate giants like Microsoft Corp. and Starbucks Corp. as well as Amazon.

The 7% excise tax went into effect Jan. 1, 2022 on gains over $250,000 per year, excluding retirement-account sales, real estate and certain small businesses. The Washington Supreme Court upheld it as a permissible excise tax in April, rejecting arguments from business groups that it’s an illegal income tax.

Billionaire Ken Fisher said in March he would move his firm from Washington to Texas,  criticizing the capital gains tax and the court decision that upheld it.

The capital gains tax now faces a ballot measure likely to be before Washington voters in November seeking to repeal it.

The initiative is one of six conservative ballot measures supported by Brian Heywood, a money manager based near Seattle who moved to Washington from California more than a decade ago in part to escape high taxes and regulation.

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Heywood has said he’s concerned that Democrats who’ve long controlled Washington politics will build on the capital gains tax to try to implement a state income tax.

He joined other anti-tax advocates in warning that these efforts will encourage the state’s wealthiest residents to leave or make Washington a less attractive place to start a business like Amazon in the first place.

(Credit: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg)

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