While I don't want to
sound like a broken record, it is becoming increasingly clear that the Federal
Reserve, other central banks and governments around the world are laying the
foundation for a negative interest rate environment that will more than likely
be imposed during the next recession. Governments are involved because
they play a very key role in any movement toward negative interest rates since
it is obvious that if consumers are paying for the "privilege" of
holding funds in a bank, many will simply convert at least some of their
savings to cash, an issue that could prove to be problematic since the whole
point of negative interest rates is to get consumers to spend more.
Obviously, the only way to beat consumers at this game is to put an end
to cash, one way or another.
A recent item by former
Treasury Secretary under Bill Clinton, former Chief Economist for the World
Bank and current Harvard University Professor, Lawrence Summers, in the
Washington Post acts as a bit of a trial balloon for the impending
"cashless society" by noting that "It's time to kill the $100 bill".
In the item, Lawrence Summers cites his reasons for the abolishment of
the 500 euro note, including the oft-cited "fact" that the criminal
and terrorist spheres operate using high denomination currency. He points
out that the 500 euro note is known as the "Bin Laden" and that the
fact that $1 million in $100 notes weighs only 22 pounds compared to 110 pounds
(filling four briefcases) if a $20 bill was the highest denomination note as
shown on this figure:
Here is the closing
paragraph of his item:
"Even better than unilateral measures in Europe would be a
global agreement to stop issuing notes worth more than say $50 or $100.
Such an agreement would be as significant as anything else the G7 or G20 has
done in years. China, which is hosting the next G-20 in September, has made
attacking corruption a central part of its economic and political strategy.
More generally, at a time when such a demonstration is very much needed, a
global agreement to stop issuing high denomination notes would also show that
the global financial groupings can stand up against “big money” and for the
interests of ordinary citizens."
I like
that, "for the interests of ordinary citizens". It has a nice,
homey ring to it, doesn't it?
In the
item, Dr. Summers quotes from a study by Peter Sands et al at Harvard's
Mossavar-Rahmani Center for Business and Government entitled "Making it Harder for the Bad Guys: the Case for
Eliminating High Denomination Notes". In the study, the
authors look the flow of illegal money and the impact of illicit money flows on
tax revenues, global financial crimes and other corruption. Let's look at their argument for ending what they consider high currency notes:
1.)
Illicit flows of money results in tax evasion which robs the public sector of
between 6 and 70 percent of what tax authorities estimate that they should be
collecting. In the United States, the IRS estimates that in 2006
(the latest year available) that there was a tax gap of $385 billion or 14.5
percent of total tax liabilities. In nations were Value Added Taxes are
part of the tax system, cash receipts are often undeclared; in
2011, across the EU, the VAT tax gap mounted to 193
billion euros in 2011.
2.) Global
financial crime money flows (excluding tax evasion and corruption)
are estimated at over $2.1 trillion annually (2011 data) or 3.6 percent
of global GDP. Here is the mechanism used to break the
link between crime and cash:
3.)
Corruption through the use of illicit cash amounts to $1 trillion annually.
The World Bank estimated that total bribes around the globe added up
to $1 trillion back in 2001 - 2002 or around 5 percent of global GDP.
4.) Less
that 1 percent of illicit cash flows are seized.
To make
their point, the authors even include this picture of seized $100 bills:
The authors
note that high denomination notes are the payment choice for those people
that are trying to evade taxes, commit crimes, finance terrorism or
pay/receive bribes and that a stack of high denomination bank notes is far more
attractive than dealing with precious metals, diamonds or bank transactions.
Here is a table showing the advantages and disadvantages of
several methods of payment that could be used by criminals:
The paper goes on to note
that, in the United States, cash payments account for 40 percent of payments by
number but only 14 percent by value. Only 1 percent of payments by number
were cash payments over $100 which corresponds to 5 percent by value.
The authors close by
refuting several arguments for retaining high denomination notes. I found
this comment in the section under "High Denomination Notes as a Way to
Save or Hoard" particularly interesting:
"There may well be
some legitimate hoarding or saving driven through fears of calamities such as
the collapse of the banking system, societal breakdown, or cybercrime. There
was some evidence of increased demand for high denomination notes in the wake
of the financial crisis in 2008. However, the question is whether issuing high
denominations represents a sensible policy response to such fears. For
example, if people are holding high denomination notes to protect themselves
against the risk of the banking system collapsing, surely deposit guarantee schemes
and robust prudential regulation represent a more effective response?
Moreover, if what we are talking about is normal people hoarding relatively
small amounts of money (tens of thousands not millions) in safes in their own
homes, then the added inconvenience of holding smaller denominations is
probably a price worth paying for the benefits of eliminating high
denominations.
There may also be
hoarding or saving driven by libertarian antipathy towards institutions like
banks and governments. For example, Hennigsen at the Centre for Research on
Globalisation: “It has long been the dream of collectivists and technocratic
elites to eliminate the semi-unregulated cash economy and black markets in
order to maximize taxation and to fully control markets...If the cashless
society is ushered in, they will have near complete control over the lives of
individual people”. Discounting the hyperbole, there is a legitimate concern
about the extent to which official scrutiny of electronic payment transactions
might infringe civil liberties and the right to privacy. Yet we face this issue
already. Most people’s savings and higher value transactions are potentially
subject to scrutiny because they are conducted and held within the banking
system. Yet if society has decided that this is something we are prepared to
tolerate to tackle financial crime, then it would seem perverse not to extend
such scrutiny to the self-selected subset of the population that use high
denomination notes to transact and save." my bold
Given all of this data,
much of which is basically very rough estimates given that it is impossible to
quantify the use of illicit cash, the authors recommend the following:
"Our proposal
is to eliminate high denomination, high value currency notes, such as the €500
note, the $100 bill, the CHF1,000 note and the £50 note. Such notes are the
preferred payment mechanism of those pursuing illicit activities, given the
anonymity and lack of transaction record they offer, and the relative ease with
which they can be transported and moved."
While the authors
present a thorough argument for abolishing what can only be considered
relatively high denomination notes, particularly the U.S. $100 bill, when
taken into context with the current negative interest rate policy trial
balloons being floated by the world's central bankers, any moves to
abolishing these notes could be the top of the slippery slope that leads
to an eventual end to cash of all forms.
The negative interest rates I think will be the last act before the system comes down. People will switch barter and metals or maybe some other currency. The fact the system needs negative interest rates is all you know about how close to end we are with the current system.
ReplyDeleteNot that I have much faith left in the fiat currency Ponzi to begin with, I find the use of 'eliminating criminal behaviour' to justify the abolition of physical currency little more than a straw man argument. To say nothing of the digital tomfoolery that nefarious organisations and individuals already carry out (just look at what the financial industry and political class do on a daily basis), criminal behaviour and terrorism both existed long before physical currency was widely used and will continue long after its elimination.
ReplyDeleteAs the-powers-that-be lose control of the global financial system that seems to be reeling from the consequences of bumping up against the limits to growth on a finite planet (particularly the cheap energy that underpins it all and the inability of the planet to absorb any more of the various toxins produced from human activity), I expect we will experience increasing tyrannical behaviour by the political and financial elite. The banning of physical cash will not come close to eliminating capricious behaviour (especially when it could be argued most of such behaviour is carried out by those that hold the reins of power), but it will make certain actions by the elite much easier to implement: negative interest rates on all deposits; confiscation of wealth; monetary system reset; currency depreciation; tracking of all financial interactions; 'redistribution'; 'guided' investments; etc.. This action is merely another in a long line of behaviours by the-powers-that-be to tighten their stranglehold on the planet and its people.
We are witnessing the death throes of industrial civilisation and as Carroll Quigley stated in his book, The Evolution of Civilizations: "It is clear that every civilization undergoes a process of historical change. We can see that a civilization comes into existence, passes through a long experience, and eventually goes out of existence…
Beyond recognizing that civilizations begin and end, historians are fairly well agreed that, after they begin, they flourish and grow for a while, that eventually they reach a peak of power and prosperity, and that they weaken and decay before their final end. The Stage of Decay is a period of acute economic depression, declining standards of living, civil wars between the various vested interests, and growing illiteracy. The society grows weaker and weaker. Vain efforts are made to stop the wastage through legislation. But the decline continues. The religious, intellectual, social, and political levels of the society begin to lose allegiance of the masses of the people on a large scale. This period of decay may last for a long time but eventually the civilization can no longer defend itself."
It seems to me that it's a matter of when, not if.
http://olduvai.ca
When the markets succumb to the fact that current economic policies have failed all will collapse. The current economic system driven by QE and NERP have been described as a Ponzi scheme and sooner or later all great Ponzi schemes must come to an end. With big business increasingly exerting its power over small enterprises it is not surprising that many people feel trapped in a world where their options are rapidly vanishing.
ReplyDeleteIn many ways those in control having taken part in a multitude of sins against the laws of supply and demand making it impossible to determine the "true price discovery" that allows our economic system to adjust and properly function. The article below delves into our role as pawns in this game.
http://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2016/05/coming-economic-end-game-may-be-more.html