Duly Noted

Raise taxes and lose across the board: the IRS shows how. Euro troubles: run while you can. Those nasty populists. Distorted perspectives that are politically correct.

1. Congress' decision to revise the US' hefty tax code deserves attention. The measure is aimed to squeeze money from declared American-owned investments if the fund is managed by foreign entities. The regulation puts an additional burden on foreign investors by forcing them to disclose everything about their American clients. For aliens, investing in the US is becoming more costly and complicated. These measures against a target group that has no lobby should be big news. They are not because, as also this legislation proves, the US is an insular country. That since Pearl Harbor this impression is caused by an error does not seem to impress anyone.

Even so, confidence in the US economy, the credibility of the dollar and the moderation of her deficit, depend on continued foreign investment. Already prior to the passing of the new rules the prescient acted. Some persons and institutions were quietly loosening their business ties to the US and Americans in general. What one hears and reads now is that the changes imposed sap the desire of engagement.

Exporting US jurisdiction abroad, and now compelling foreign businesses to act as enforcers of US ordinances and as the collection agency of the IRS, are irritants. Not only "US Persons" are to be reported, but the status of shareholding legal persons — such as investment funds – are also to be investigated by operators. In case of error, the threatened sanctions are massive enough to elicit radical self-protection. It is to avoid everything that has to do with the, in this respect, unpredictably capricious USA.

If a foreign bank has an account at a US institution, under the terms of the new Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act, it must determine whether that institution has an agreement with IRS. If not then all gains become subject to a 30% punitive tax to be collected by the deposit's host. The ruling involves not only the activities of about six thousand banks but also 50,000 to 200,000 funds, fiduciaries and investment firms. This creates high administrative costs and exposes those involved to IRS surprises that can criminalize them. The result is that the separation from US clients and the avoidance of any US-related economic activity is emerging as a wise strategy.

This is hardly an American interest. It will cost dearly because US government bonds and US stocks will lose attraction. Considering that much of the deficit is financed by trusting foreigners, the consequences will be of interest. Regrettably, the US taxpayer and job-seeker will hardly become conscious of the laws made in his name that work to worsen the terms by which he lives.
This raises questions regarding the future of US "Treasuries." These are now placed at 3%+ interest. Regarding that advantage for the issuer, the foregoing suggests the possible end of a "good thing." Indirectly that gives rise to a thought. "Is everybody entirely certain that there is no way that the American economy can be hurt?"

2. More about money. The Euro rests on pillars, some of which, if examined, might prove to be myths. One fiction is that no member will have a deficit above 3%. No Euro user, not even Germany, manages that. Greece, Ireland and Spain score above 10% while France and Portugal are just below that number. Therefore the Euro-Zone's average deficit rises to above 6%. Consider that these are official statistics. Greek-style, and not unintentional inaccuracies, might be included.

Another reason helps to undermine the trust in the system. Often the unnoticed inching towards bankruptcy became possible with the cover provided by supervising sympathizers in Brussels. Smarties advise one to "forget it" and to go into currencies that have the backing of a real country. Meanwhile, outsiders celebrate their luck of not having joined.

3. Political power and currency are, not accidentally, related terms. Although not a state, the EU has two things states have. One is a bureaucracy and the other is the coin of the realm. The main problem of the Euro is not the missing state as such. The existing and functioning common market compensates somewhat for the missing political unity and the central organs that can regulate. The difficulty is that, even with agreed upon procedures to protect the currency, the cultural differences within the haphazardly expanded union remain significant. These mean that the sense of obligation to conform to contractual agreements, whether private or public, is not identical. What is regarded as cheating in some countries is viewed as a creative solution to snafus.

In all fairness, however, at the time of the entry of some candidates, the old members sent signals that they did not quite "mean" what they demanded officially. Not infrequently, the political criteria for acceptance had not been met. That is the point when the cheating began. The hope had been that after the attainment of membership bad economic habits and the problems of governance imported into the community would be overcome. This lenience suggested that the established members are colluding with candidates (minority rights, corruption, clean elections). The seeming "understanding" made post-entrance solutions unlikely. Regarding monetary policy, giving marginal members reason to conclude that they would be bailed out, worsened old problems.
 
4. Amused, the writer is observing what is labeled as "extreme right-wing" or as "populist." By now, the routine charge of populism has achieved fad status akin to piercings, baggy pants and snowboards. This notation addresses itself to the term "populist" when applied as a charge before ritual condemnation. There are things that we all know but which the elites, being domiciled in their "houses high on the hills," can avoid. Since the problem does not fit their concept it is not supposed to exist; they are reluctant to discuss the matter. If, inconveniently, someone publicizes unfitting concerns, the elite knows that it lacks an effective response. Therefore, in want of a convincing answer, the party raising the issue is dismissed as "populist." In doing so, the claimant has essentially accepted defeat on a playing field that has been leveled to the traditional élites' disadvantage.

Perhaps populism should be given a new meaning. In practice, it appears that populism is when "they" have no good retort and must allege, for that reason, that the people are too simple to fathom the problem. Consequently, those who refer to the average person's judgment are accused of misleading agitation to rally the barefooted. In trouble, the folks without arguments allege that the populists are wrong simply because they have simple answers. Indeed: "check-mate" is a simple matter.

5. The cult of fact-denial is a luxury of the overly confident. When practiced as a policy, it is to protect what is in totalitarian parlance a "general line." The correctness of this program is felt to be so overwhelming that nothing that challenges it can be true. At the same time, any discussion of the apparent conflict of theory with lived life is deemed to slow the "marching column" as it slogs toward its goal. Perusing a literary review an illustrative incident provoked the foregoing. An authoress, originally from East Germany by the name of Maron, told of the matter. After her escape from the "GDR," she addressed a gathering of women in Hamburg. When she described the East's system as an "oppressive dictatorship," the audience protested. They took her comment to mean that everything was perfect in their lives. Under oppression, Ms. Maron meant State Security. The assembled ladies, suffering from a distorted perspective, found the Stasi's equivalent in male chauvinist pig husbands who disliked dishwashing. Conclude: distorted views are correct if they rate PC.

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1 comment to Duly Noted

  • Ivan Ivanovich

    When I read “Indeed: “check-mate” is a simple matter” I thought “Well that one line made the whole article worth reading”. Then I got the bonus with the dishwashing line.

    Keep up the good work.

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