Invade
Vanuatu!
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell,
Jr.
They
say there are no foreign threats to the US. Nonsense, cries the
Washington Post. Echoing the Clinton administration and the
OECD, the editorial page has found a rogue nation that imperils
American life as we know it. As the headline ominously puts it:
"The Threat from Vanuatu."
Who
cares about Vanuatu, you may ask, thereby indicating your ignorance
of the fact that this is still a dangerous world. Vanuatu, known
before independence in 1980 as New Hebrides, consists of 83 small
islands in the southwest corner of the Pacific Ocean, northeast
of Australia and slightly west of Fiji. Its total population is
200,000, mostly Christian as a result of 19th-century
missionary activity, with the natives employed mainly in subsistence
farming.
So
what’s the threat? Are they building The Bomb? Harboring terrorists?
Promoting hate? Trading with Iraq? Growing pot? No, the threat comes
from Vanuatu’s laws on taxes (you don’t have to pay any) and banking
(the right of contract between customer and banker is protected).
Thus, Vanuatu has attracted some very large banks and provides a
service that banks in the developed world are forbidden to offer:
customer confidentiality and security in private property.
So
where’s the harm? The spin is that governments of some poor countries
are losing revenue, up to $50 billion per year. But that’s not the
real driving force behind the attack. It’s the US government that
is most worried. Can you imagine a bunch of politicians with $2
trillion per year at their disposal complaining they don’t have
enough? Washington is awash in the loot we call taxes, with federal
revenue soaring to unexpected heights. The reason is the economic
boom. More income means more income taxes. Higher stock prices means
more taxes from capital gains. More spending means more excise tax
payments.
But
somehow it’s never enough. Bureaucrats in DC can’t sleep at night
for imagining the trickles of cash that are escaping their clutches
and being banked in independent Vanuatu. Incredibly, the cartel
of governments called the OECD is threatening trade sanctions against
this poor country unless it changes its tax and banking laws. And
not only Vanuatu: a total of 35 countries around the world are on
the OECD hit list:
Andorra;
Anguilla; Antigua and Barbuda; Aruba; Bahrain; Barbados; Belize;
British Virgin Islands; Cook Islands; Dominica; Gibraltar; Grenada;
Guernsey/Sark/Alderney; Isle of Man; Jersey; Liberia; Liechtenstein;
Maldives; Marshall Islands; Monaco; Montserrat; Nauru; Netherlands
Antilles; Niue; Panama; Samoa; Seychelles; St Lucia; The Federation
of St. Christopher & Nevis; St. Vincent and the Grenadines;
Tonga; Turks & Caicos; US Virgin Islands; and, finally, Vanuatu.
Bomb
the Grenadines! Overrun Tonga! Liberate Liberia! Invade Grenada
again, not to toss out the communists but to overthrow the capitalists!
But
isn’t there such a thing as national sovereignty anymore? The answer
is no, says the Washington Post: "Sovereignty cannot
be an absolute defense of harmful behavior that spills across borders."
But in this case, the "harmful behavior" is a leak in
Western governments’ otherwise ironclad system of looting. Obviously,
the people who use the services offered by these countries benefit
from them.
Even
those who do not use their services benefit from the competition
these countries provide to the high-tax regimes of the developed
world. Because tax havens exist, governments in the OECD face at
least some potential penalty for raising tax rates to too high a
level. If rich governments don’t like the competition from these
countries, there is an easy way out: lower tax rates to make evasion
less profitable. The competition also helps poor nations understand
that low taxes are the best means to attracting investment.
Instead,
the OECD wants to go the other way, and create a world cartel of
tax prisons, where money can go nowhere but through state-approved
channels so the power elite can take its high percentage. Meanwhile,
these same governments presume to prosecute private businesses for
attempting to collude in their operations. Isn’t it obvious that
the biggest and most dangerous cartel of all is the one that rich
governments are attempting to create among themselves at the expense
of their citizens?
This
OECD is very dangerous to poor nations as well. They have little
capital on which to build prosperity. They have low rates of labor
productivity to generate income and attract business. Instead, the
only way they can get ahead economically is by exploiting their
comparative advantages relative to developed nations. And what are
those advantages? Lower regulations, cheaper labor costs, lower
taxes, and better banking laws.
In
each case, rich nations are attempting to steal those advantages.
We’ve seen the World Trade Organization attempting to rachet-up
environmental regulations on poor countries. It was on this basis
that ministers from the developing world walked away from the WTO
meetings at Seattle. The International Labor Organization is trying
to enact pro-labor union sanctions against low-wage countries. The
World Bank is trying to pry open their banking system under the
excuse of demanding "transparency." And now the OECD is
trying to take away their tax and banking advantages.
In
neither the OECD report nor the Washington Post editorial can you
find a word about the harm such "upward harmonization"
of laws would cause poor countries like Vanuatu. Without its banking
center, the country would immediately collapse into total poverty,
all so greedy Western governments could get more tax revenue. The
rich countries will respond by providing "development"
aid, a bribe to local politicians to obey rich governments in all
matters.
These
little havens of tax liberation benefit everyone who matters: the
citizens who use the banking services, the citizens who don’t because
their governments face some degree of competition, the banks that
provide the services, and the poor countries who profit from more
capitalism as a means toward economic development. Who loses? Bloated
governments in the OECD. In the war on Vanuatu, is there any doubt
about what side is right?
July
7, 2000
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr., is president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama. He
also edits a daily news site, LewRockwell.com.
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