The
March Towards Capital Controls Is Quickening
by
Simon
Black
Recently
by Simon Black: New
Government SOP: Step Out of Line and We’ll Cut You Off
In the late
1920s, the economy of the Weimar Republic was beset by numerous
fiscal troubles. The global depression spread quickly to Germany,
undermining the governments ability to make its reparation
payments from the Great War.
Fearing a return
to hyperinflation, many Germans who had spent the last decade building
up a small fortune during the Weimar Republics own "Roaring
20s" decided to pack up and leave; they remembered the days
when banknotes were used as wallpaper and had no desire to repeat
the experience.
In 1931, Chancellor
Heinrich Bruning imposed a flight tax, which levied
a 25% tax on the value of all property and capital for Germans leaving
the country.
Total revenue
collected from this tax amounted to roughly 1 million Reichsmarks
(RM) in its earliest days ($56 million today). By the late 1930s
under Hitlers rule, flight tax revenue soared to RM 342 million
($21.5 billion today) as more people headed toward the exits.
This flight
tax constitutes one of the earliest modern examples of capital controls.
Theyve evolved substantially since the days of Hitler, but
the end goal is the same governments controlling the flow
of capital across borders.
Governments
impose these for a variety of reasons rapidly developing
nations may want to restrict the flow of capital into their country,
preventing hot money from pumping up prices and affecting
local markets. We see this today in places like Brazil and Thailand.
In other instances,
bankrupt governments seek to trap capital within their borders,
maximizing the amount available for subsequent taxation or other
forms of confiscation. This tactic is usually employed when lost
confidence has impaired the governments capability to borrow.
Were
seeing strong indications of both examples today, though the latter
is the most alarming. As I scan the headlines and hear from colleagues
in the US and Europe, its clear to me that the march towards
stricter capital controls is quickening its pace.
The British
government, for example, just announced an increase to its bank
levy that taxes UK-domiciled banks on their worldwide balance sheets.
In response, HSBC has indicated that it may move its headquarters
elsewhere.
I suspect the
British government will enact legislation to discourage or prevent
this from happening, likely with a modern day corporate flight tax
(albeit with a more patriotic sounding name).
Capital controls
can take a variety of other forms including taxation on outward
remittances, restrictions on the movement of financial instruments,
bureaucratic approval processes for foreign transactions, reporting
requirements for foreign assets, and government control over banks.
This last is
important when politicians and bankers are in bed with each
other, banks can be compelled to loan a portion of their deposits
to the treasury at unrealistic terms, sticking bank customers with
sub-optimal yields below the rate of inflation.
Read
the rest of the article
February 11, 2011
Copyright
© 2011 Sovereign Man
|