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In Uruguay, A Tax Haven With Lots Of Beaches And Little Crime

The South American country’s new policies are attracting Argentines fleeing a deep economic crisis, and some Americans and Europeans, too.

Tourists take photos in front of a sculpture of a giant hand emerging from the sand on Brava Beach in Punta del Este, Uruguay, on Saturday, Nov. 19, 2022. Uruguay's Punta del Este, sometimes called the Monaco of South America, became a pandemic haven for thousands of wealthy vacation home owners. Now investors are pouring millions into offices and educational facilities in a bid for immigration to accelerate the change from iconic beach town to year-round city.
Tourists take photos in front of a sculpture of a giant hand emerging from the sand on Brava Beach in Punta del Este, Uruguay, on Saturday, Nov. 19, 2022. Uruguay's Punta del Este, sometimes called the Monaco of South America, became a pandemic haven for thousands of wealthy vacation home owners. Now investors are pouring millions into offices and educational facilities in a bid for immigration to accelerate the change from iconic beach town to year-round city.
(Bloomberg Businessweek) -- At the Atlantic resort of Punta del Este in Uruguay, signs of an influx of wealthy residents are everywhere. The yacht club is now busy year-round, enrollment in private schools has swelled, and Italian developer Cipriani is breaking ground on what it says will be the “largest luxury complex in South America.”
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