Quote from brutusmaximus:
..........Still, I wouldn't want to waste my time living in Switzerland or Monacco....boring as hell..........
true but you don`t get it. You do not actually have to live in that country.To have a tax status is one thing to live and move around another. We traders need laptops and connectivity. I can get that anywhere and I am loving it especially with saving 6 figures every year........it is all about percentages.
Living on the move is not comparable to living in one place. Changing accommodation repeatedly is a serious hassle. Many activities can only be done properly if you put down roots of some kind. Owned property is more enjoyable than rented property, but is a major hassle to manage from long distance. Relationships don't work over long distance, casual pickups are harder when there's a language barrier. Contacts take time to make and tend to be in one area - if you move away just after building up a network, it loses a lot of its effectiveness. Rebuilding a social life in a country full of strangers takes time and effort. Different cultures need adjusting to.
There's also the problem that only a small number of places are the best places to live in. If you are moving to new places all the time, by definition you are not living in the best places most of the time. IMO living on the move is a good thing for a while if you are single with no responsibilities, but over the longer-term its downsides begin to grate.
There are many civilised first world countries where you can structure tax to get the overall burden down to tolerable levels. For example, you can longer-term trade financial markets virtually tax free in the UK via spread betting. In the US you can be a long-term stock or property investor and pay a mere 15% on your capital gains. Some European countries don't tax capital gains at all. Ireland taxes companies at 12.5% (although that may rise). Quite frankly, in many cases it is worth paying an extra 10-20% in tax to live in your home country, where you know how things work, can communicate with 100% effectiveness, and do not have to move around constantly.
Whatever you earn now, ask yourself would you go and live in Mongolia or Saudi Arabia if you were offered a 50% pay rise. If you answered no, then why vacate a reasonably civilised home country, for the de facto 50% pay rise that you get from moving to a tax haven or becoming a perpetual traveller, and avoiding 1st world taxes?