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Articles
Retirees Find More for Less in
Panama
Tax breaks, lower prices and a laid-back lifestyle draw a growing
community of Americans
to one of the nation's small towns.
BOQUETE, Panama — Golf course manager John Sutton had had enough of lawyers,
telemarketers, several of his neighbors and the federal government. So the
San Diegan and his wife took early retirement, sold everything they owned
and moved to Panama. The Suttons, who bought a house here last
summer, exemplify a wave of American retirees who want to get away — far,
far away — from it all. Each month, about 20 of them are turning up in this
remote coffee-growing town nestled in the mountains of western Panama,
buying houses and starting new lives. It's the latest hot spot in Central
America, a region that over the last decade has attracted increasing numbers
of U.S. retirees. "Boquete gave us the opportunity to have a
great, comfortable lifestyle," said Sutton, 50, who with wife Dinah put
$5,000 down on their brand-new house without even seeing it. The subdivision
is named, appropriately enough, Hidden Valley. Loading groceries
into his car in front of Romero's, the local supermarket, he said, "This
isn't Albertson's, but it's close enough." Other U.S. retirees are
making similarly radical moves, attracted by Panama's favorable tax
treatment of foreigners, a carrot dangled by most Central American
governments; the relatively low cost of living; the lush surroundings; and
the eternally mild climate. "We got tired of the snow," said
retiree Barbara Votava, who moved here from Spokane, Wash., with her
husband, Bill, after he sold his photo-processing business. "This is as
close to paradise as you can get." In recent years, retired
foreigners have been drawn to Costa Rica, Nicaragua and parts of Mexico. But
Panama's moment seems to have arrived. Boquete has turned up on several
"Best Places to Retire" lists published in recent months in U.S. newspapers
and on Internet sites. "I paid my dues, got my two boys through
college and decided things have got to be better someplace else," said John
Villegas, an Arizona retiree who publishes the Internet newspaper the
Boquete Times. "They are." Asked to define what Boquete retirees
have in common, Villegas said: "They have strong ties to their past and
recollections of better times, nuclear families, respect for the law and
civility. And they have no qualms about looking outside U.S. borders to
re-create those good old days." Like most other Latin American
countries, Panama does not keep statistics on the number of foreign retirees
living within its borders. But immigration officials here and throughout the
region agree that the numbers are rising. Panama, for example,
last year granted 449 special retiree visas, nearly double the 229 granted
in 2003, according to the nation's immigration office. A total of 2,500
pensioner visas have been issued. Costa Rica, which has been retirees'
favored Central American destination, has issued 11,000. Under the
terms of the visas, the Panamanian government exempts foreign retirees from
paying property or income tax, as long as they prove they have $500 minimum
monthly income. Newcomers can bring in a car and up to $10,000 in belongings
tax-free. Interest from their deposits in Panama's banks is also exempt.
Retiree visa holders also get numerous discounts, including 50% off most
plane and bus tickets. Panama says the special tax status is good
for the country because retirees create jobs and inject more cash into the
local economy. A case in point is newcomer Mike LaFoley, a
Boston-area native. Since he and his wife, Annie, arrived here four years
ago, he has started a coffee farm and spent thousands of dollars in
construction improvements on his property. "My last pay period, I
handed out 11 envelopes to my workers," LaFoley said. His stuccoed home,
like most of those in the subdivisions popping up in and around Boquete,
looks like it could have been built in an upscale Orange County suburb,
replete with verdant yard, faux-tiled roof, driveway and carport.
Although only about 500 foreigners live in Boquete and its environs,
builders last year took out permits to build 2,000 additional housing units
in anticipation of a real estate boom. Many here say Boquete
benefits in comparison with Costa Rica, which experienced an influx of U.S.
retirees in the 1990s but has lost some of its allure. Rising crime, higher
real estate prices and controversial government proposals to scrap or reduce
retirees' tax breaks have persuaded many to come to Panama instead.
"We were going to live in Costa Rica, but my wife and I didn't like the way
it felt," said Sylvan Cohen, a retired building materials merchant from
Philadelphia. "It felt like people were leaving — too many 'For Sale'
signs." Cohen and his wife also visited dozens of U.S. states in
their RV looking for a place to retire before settling on Panama.
Life in this farm town of 18,000 is tranquil and unhurried — for now. Many
fear that the population of rat-race refugees is rising so fast that
paradise may soon lose its charm. In addition to Hidden Valley, half a dozen
subdivisions geared to Americans are either under construction or on the
drawing boards on former coffee farms and cattle ranches. Rising
demand for property has caused a tenfold increase in land values in just two
years, said Judith Urriola, manager of the local branch of Banistmo Bank.
"Costa Rica got expensive, and it's going to happen here. We just hope it
takes a while," said Jorge Conte, who is developing a 350-home subdivision
called Hacienda los Molinos. Prices for a 2,300-square-foot house in his
development average about $160,000. That's the low end of the home price
scale, locals say. Most new homes sell for $200,000 and up. The
influx of moneyed foreigners has had a strong impact on this once sleepy
town, Banistmo's Urriola said. It's been great for owners of coffee farms
who have struck it rich, selling their 500-acre properties for $1 million
and more, a king's ransom in rural Panama. Less positive has been the impact
on small store owners who are being replaced by discount chains like
Romero's, she said, that cater to first-world consumer tastes.
Maria Ruiz, scion of a local coffee-growing family who got her graduate
degree at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, says that as coffee
plantations are redeveloped into homes, the transformation of the town could
hurt local indigenous people who come from a neighboring reservation for
three months of the year to harvest coffee. Mike Scott, a NASA
facilities manager from Houston who is looking to retire in a couple of
years, came here last week to see what the excitement was all about. He
likes the town but found that some units in the new subdivisions aren't the
bargains he expected. "There is an element of feeding frenzy here,
of the attitude that 'we have to get something now or we'll be priced out of
the market,' " said Scott, who is in his mid-50s. He added that he
is going to wait to buy in hopes the bubble bursts and prices drop.
Scott and others say they appreciate the welcoming embrace of the Panamanian
government. Many newcomers say they felt driven out of the United States by
the government's intrusive policies. "People are giving up their
freedom in exchange for protection" back in America, said Chuck Fross, a
retired electrician from Kalamazoo, Mich., who bought a house here last
year. "The government has stuck its nose into everything."
Villegas, the Arizona retiree, said it felt good to be free of the "layers
of bureaucracy" in the United States, while another recent transplant from
Vermont, who asked not to be identified, decried the U.S. obsession with
"everything happening by the book." Does Boquete have any
downside? Residents pointed out that there is no urgent-care hospital, the
closest being a 45-minute drive away in the provincial capital, David.
But Ted and Louise Harrison, emergency-room doctors from British Columbia
who bought property here last year, are working on a project to build one.
They say that meanwhile, the level of regular medical care is good in
Boquete and elsewhere in Panama, because many of the doctors got their
training in the United States. Hershel Stolebarger, a retired New
Mexico real estate broker, said a friend felt comfortable getting a hip
replacement in Panama rather than the United States — especially after
finding out it would cost $5,000 compared with $30,000 in "El Norte."
The benefits far outweigh the disadvantages, Sutton said. His monthly living
expenses average $1,500 a month, half what he and his wife spent in San
Diego, he says. The biggest savings are in health insurance. He
and his wife pay $50 per month for government health coverage that would
cost $1,200 in San Diego. Although he shares the concerns that the
U.S. government is overly intrusive, Sutton said his moving to Panama had
nothing to do with politics, echoing most of the newcomers here.
"I bleed red, white and blue. This was a lifestyle decision. We could have
worked 10 more years and gained nothing," Sutton said. "You give up the
hustle and bustle, sure, and the convenience of shopping malls. But you come
down here and the stress level drops immediately. My wife's blood pressure
dropped 25 points the first week we were here."
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