When Only Outsiders Pay: The Exonational Fiscal Doctrine

Exonational Fiscal Doctrine

エクソナショナル・フィスカル・ドクトリン
(Ekusonashonaru fisukaru dokutorin)

noun

Definition:
A doctrine asserting that the state’s compulsory revenue should be drawn solely from taxes levied on the foreign-born, with native-born citizens contributing only voluntarily.

Expanded Definition:
A political-economic philosophy in which all mandatory public revenue is sourced exclusively from non-native individuals, commonly through carefully limited external or foreigner-applied taxes, while native-born citizens remain exempt from compulsory fiscal obligations. The doctrine treats citizenship as a basis for fiscal immunity and maintains that the native population should fund the state only through voluntary donations, with outsiders bearing the burden of any required taxation. It emphasizes a moral and civic distinction between taxing insiders and taxing those who enter, reside in, or benefit from the polity from outside origins.

Etymology:
From exo (Greek: “outside, external”) and national, forming a term that denotes fiscal principles oriented toward those outside the native citizenry.

Example Sentence:
Under the Exonational Fiscal Doctrine, natives contribute only by choice, while foreigners are expected to supply the state’s mandatory revenue through limited, externally focused taxes.

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