The recent introduction of a 1.1 % wealth tax in Norway has triggered a rapid outflow of the country’s ultra‑rich. In the past twelve months, roughly 30 billionaires and centi‑millionaires have left, a number that exceeds the total who departed over the previous 13 years combined.
How the wealth tax works
- The tax is levied jointly by municipal and state authorities at 1.1 % of net assets.
- It applies to unrealized gains, meaning owners must pay tax on the increase in value of assets even if they have not sold them.
- To meet the liability, many are forced to pay out dividends from their companies. Those dividends are then taxed again under ordinary income‑tax rules, creating a double‑tax burden.
- Example: a shareholder needing to cover a 6 million‑krone wealth‑tax bill may have to distribute a 10 million‑krone dividend, paying tax on both the dividend and the wealth tax.
Economic impact
- The requirement to extract cash for tax payments reduces capital available for reinvestment, limiting growth and hiring.
- Unlike corporate‑tax cuts, which can be offset by expense write‑offs, a wealth tax directly constrains owners’ ability to fund expansion because the tax is based on asset value, not cash flow.
- The OECD has repeatedly warned that wealth taxes are “a terrible idea,” citing repeated failures in countries such as France.
Where the wealthy are moving
- United Arab Emirates – a well‑known low‑tax haven.
- Switzerland – particularly the cantons of Lucerne and Lugano. Although not the cheapest jurisdiction, Switzerland offers a high quality of life, proximity to central Europe, and a more predictable tax environment.
- Germany to Switzerland – similar migration patterns are observed among German high‑net‑worth individuals.
Broader trends
- Increased mobility: Modern relocation is far easier than in past decades, allowing high‑income earners to shift residence without disrupting income streams.
- Lifestyle alternatives: Cities such as Kuala Lumpur now provide a quality of life that rivals many Western urban centers, making relocation more attractive beyond pure tax considerations.
- Potential U.S. tax escalation: Speculation about future U.S. marginal rates approaching 70 % has already prompted discussion of similar migration patterns.
Implications for Norway
- The wealth tax’s disproportionate burden on the ultra‑rich—who receive relatively little in direct services compared with the tax paid—has made the policy politically unsustainable for that segment.
- While Norway continues to offer free healthcare, education, and a strong egalitarian social model, the combination of high taxes and less appealing climate may erode its ability to retain top wealth.
- If the current outflow continues, Norway could face a long‑term decline in domestic investment and a loss of entrepreneurial talent.
Outlook
- Other nations contemplating wealth taxes may encounter similar push‑back, especially if they lack mechanisms to offset the cash‑flow strain on asset‑rich individuals.
- The Norwegian experiment appears poised to become a cautionary case study in how tax policy can directly influence migration of high‑net‑worth individuals and, by extension, national economic dynamism.





