by Tyler Durden
While some argue that Cyprus was "one of the biggest money-washing
machines for Russian criminals," and others that Cyprus ex-Pat community
and energy resources brough deposits (not to say their high deposit
interest rates), it seems the European Union (IMF et al.) have decided
that the route to crisis stabilization, just as we outlined here over a year ago and updated here, is through a wealth tax.
However, as Handelsblatt reports,
the gross distortions of wealth distribution among both core and
peripheral nations (evident in the chasm between 'mean' and 'median' net
assets - or wealth) makes some nations more 'capable' of 'giving' and
as Commerzbank's chief economist notes, median wealth in Italy is
EUR164,000 (as opposed to Austria's median of around EUR76,000 and mean
of around EUR265,000) meaning that in theory Italy has no debt crisis
(with net assets at 173% of GDP) - significantly more than the Germans
at 124% - "so it would make sense, in Italy a one-time property tax levy," he suggested.
"A tax rate of 15% on financial assets would probably be
enough to push the Italian government debt to below the critical level
of 100% of gross domestic product." So there you have it, the
'new deal' in Europe, as we warned, is 'wealth taxes' and testing the
"capacity of Cypriots" appears to be the strawman on what the public
will take before social unrest becomes intolerable.
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Showing posts with label International Monetary Fund. Show all posts
Showing posts with label International Monetary Fund. Show all posts
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
Monday, February 25, 2013
Gold & the Developed World in the Face of Massive Change in the Next Two Decades
by Julian D. W. Phillips
In the last five years, we have seen the start of the decline of the developed world and the real impact of the economic rise of China on that world. What lies ahead? James Wolfensohn, the ex-president of the World Bank gave a short lecture in which he forecasts what the worlds cash flows would be like in 2030:
·For the last century and far more, 80% of the cash flow of the world flowed to what we know as the developed world where 20% of the people lived. Twenty percent of the cash flow went to the underdeveloped world where 80% of the worlds population lived.
Etichette:
China,
Currency devaluation,
Currency War,
Debt,
gold,
Instability,
International Monetary Fund,
Monetary Sistem,
oil,
World Bank
Friday, February 15, 2013
Russia Flips Petrodollar On Its Head By Exporting Crude, Buying Record Gold
by Tyler Durden
China has been a very active purchaser of gold for its reserves in the last few years, as we extensively covered here and here, but another nation has taken over the 'biggest buyer' role (for the same reasons as China).
Central banks around the world have printed money to escape the global financial crisis, and as Bloomberg reports, IMF data shows Russia added 570 metric tons in the past decade. Putin's fears that "the U.S. is endangering the global economy by abusing its dollar monopoly," are clearly being taken seriously as the world's largest oil producer turns black gold into hard assets. A lawmaker in Putin's party noted, "the more gold a country has, the more sovereignty it will have if there’s a cataclysm with the dollar, the euro, the pound or any other reserve currency."
Putin’s gold strategy fits in with his resource nationalism, statist agenda, as Bloomberg notes when Russia defaulted in 1998 it took 28 barrels of oil to buy one ounce of gold, was 11.5 barrels when Putin came to power and when in 2005 it had fallen to 6.5 barrels (less than half what it is now), he went all in, telling the central bank to buy.
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