Quote: (08-06-2015 03:38 AM)bjjay Wrote:
I guess I'm gonna do it.
Quote: (08-06-2015 03:16 AM)Orson Wrote:
But, consider what you want to use it for:
Travel?
To have a separate ID for starting new businesses?
Or for new (and more private) financial or banking relationships?
An escape hatch (in case of crisis)?
Or just a novelty?
One consideration is simple: cost. I doubt Moldova PP costs a lot, but sometimes this matters because it is pricey.
Let's get very practical and simple. Suppose you get married. Your wife turns out to be a real ball buster - a Biatch!
But you have this alternate PP - and you can set up a safety deposit box,
and fill it with cash and gold that she doesn't know about and she can't
attach (in case of divorce - because private, unknown to her).....
I say, DO IT!
Simple asset protection, just in case.... (Shhhh - keep it private. Otherwise, you lose the convenient advantages).
Several things:
The law in my country is that I only can get out of the country with the passport of this country because I'm a citizen.
New businesses - did you mean in other countries? what is the advantage to use the second passport for that? The same about the bank account, in other countries?
Thanks!
"New businesses - did you mean in other countries? what is the advantage to use the second passport for that?"
Because you can set up a business using that other PP and your name on it, instead of the other one.
This allows you the freedom to disclose or not disclose certain information.
For example, you may find that the tax burden on profit retained in the company in a different nation is less than what you would pay in another.
For some nations, this is extremely helpful for survival, not just making a living. Suppose you come from a conflict zone like Libya or Syria. Having another PP give you freedom to leave to another nation - one more peaceful and safe. To be stateless and without papers means you are at the mercy of whatever help you find, or don't.
Banks care about your identity (ie, the PP) in order to not be used for criminal purposes. They also need a physical address. And this might be in the country of your birth; the country of the second PP, or a third country.
If you have company, you will also need a bank. And it may or not be in the same country as your new company.
At any rate, having a second PP gives you options. Options mean new choices and new freedoms - things that can make you more mobile and more free to make money and travel, as well as cope with emergencies.
Another use for second PP is easy travel from a natural disaster. Suppose your home city is flooded. Your family and friends are there, but their homes are damaged, like yours. What to do?
Go to another country! Like, one where you already have business ties or connections - a company and bank account is a good start! This can help you work on your own, or else find jobs and make an income: move and go back to work while others with more lost or damaged property take care of themselves, and you are out of harms way.
If you travel on your one passport, you may not be so desirable to come to neighboring country. It is too disruptive for them to welcome you. But, on a second PP, you are just another tourist passing through, not a "refugee" that will cost them too much money and trouble.
I hope these brief answers are a start for you to see some of the advantages of having another PP.
Of course, much of this - whether retreat to safety from war or disasters - is more important if one is from a smaller or poorer country than if you come from a large and richer nation.