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Topic: The Coming Global Wealth Tax - page 3. (Read 4998 times)

sr. member
Activity: 378
Merit: 255
December 04, 2013, 11:12:18 AM
#11
This is just the beginning. (See my post titled Economic Devastation)

If you have ever read Asimov's foundation trilogy we are like the happily oblivious capital of the empire. Bad bad times are ahead.

If you read the prequel Smiley, they weren't quite that oblivious (or happy). Just self denial.

Oh wait, thats us.

No it's not.  Wink
full member
Activity: 141
Merit: 100
December 04, 2013, 11:08:11 AM
#10
Wealth taxes are the natural and logical consequence of irresponsible deficit spending

Bitcoins are a natural and obvious hedge against govt sponsored theft

The case rests...

I disagree that theres anything logical about it. It might theoretically redistribute the wealth (which i guess would theoretically fix things), however, impossible to implement and as if offshore bank accounts weren't enough, we have gold, bitcoins, and dummy coorporations. Impossible to implement fairly and would drive capital investment as FAR AWAY as possible.

My points is that even without Bitcoins, they would never implement something so stupid.
full member
Activity: 141
Merit: 100
December 04, 2013, 11:04:50 AM
#9
This is just the beginning. (See my post titled Economic Devastation)

If you have ever read Asimov's foundation trilogy we are like the happily oblivious capital of the empire. Bad bad times are ahead.

If you read the prequel Smiley, they weren't quite that oblivious (or happy). Just self denial.

Oh wait, thats us.
newbie
Activity: 28
Merit: 0
December 04, 2013, 10:56:22 AM
#8
who said "bitcoin is a bubble"? Smiley

This forum will need some additional storage space on the server if I start naming all of them with time date and the comment.
legendary
Activity: 1946
Merit: 1055
December 04, 2013, 09:02:19 AM
#7
This is just the beginning. (See my post titled Economic Devastation)

If you have ever read Asimov's foundation trilogy we are like the happily oblivious capital of the empire. Bad bad times are ahead.
legendary
Activity: 4060
Merit: 1303
December 04, 2013, 09:00:48 AM
#6
There's no way that would happen without extreme riotting...

Look at what happened in Cyprus earlier this year. Lots of complaints, lots of people unhappy, lots of protests, but it still happened. Zeroday on these forums lots ~700k euros.

These trial balloons are the warnings of what the socialist parasitic politicians want to do.
hero member
Activity: 905
Merit: 1001
December 04, 2013, 09:00:27 AM
#5
who said "bitcoin is a bubble"? Smiley
legendary
Activity: 2268
Merit: 1278
December 04, 2013, 08:54:12 AM
#4
There's no way that would happen without extreme riotting...
Why do you think the police has been militarized? The US government expect massive riots to happen in the near future. It won't even be because of something like this, but simply because food stamps and welfare checks stop flowing.
sr. member
Activity: 322
Merit: 250
December 04, 2013, 08:51:42 AM
#3
There's no way that would happen without extreme riotting...
legendary
Activity: 2268
Merit: 1278
December 04, 2013, 08:43:38 AM
#2
There is nothing preventing measures like this, and much worse later, from happening. All the more reason to keep my money in bitcoin. Just try and take them. I'll happily go to jail before letting them get their hands on them, if I even live in this part of the world by then.
legendary
Activity: 4060
Merit: 1303
December 04, 2013, 08:36:06 AM
#1
Ideas like a global wealth tax - kind of like the bail-in, in Cyprus, are being floated by the IMF. This type of news should only be a boon for bitcoin as people find out about it and consider the implications.  The article is not an approving one, by the way.

The Coming Global Wealth Tax - WSJ: http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702304355104579232480552517224?mod=WSJ_hpp_sections_opinion

Quote
Between ObamaCare, Iran and last quarter's uptick in U.S. economic growth, taxpayers these days may be distracted from several dangers to come. But households from the United States to Europe and Japan may soon face fiscal shocks worse than any market crash.
...
Of course these measures won't return the world's top economies to sustainable levels of debt. That could be achieved only through significant economic growth (the good way) or, as the IMF puts it, "by repudiating public debt or inflating it away" (the bad way). In October the IMF floated a bold idea that didn't get the attention it deserved: lowering sovereign debt levels through a one-off tax on private wealth.

As applied to the euro zone, the IMF claims that a 10% levy on households' positive net worth would bring public debt levels back to pre-financial crisis levels. Such a tax sounds crazy, but recall what happened in euro-zone country Cyprus this year: Holders of bank accounts larger than 100,000 euros had to incur losses of up to 100% on their savings above that threshold, in order to "bail-in" the bankrupt Mediterranean state. Japanese households, sitting on one of the world's largest pools of savings, have particular reason to worry about their assets: At 240% of GDP, their country's public debt ratio is more than twice that of Cyprus when it defaulted.

From New York to London, Paris and beyond, powerful economic players are deciding that with an ever-deteriorating global fiscal outlook, conventional levels and methods of taxation will no longer suffice. That makes weapons of mass wealth destruction—such as the IMF's one-off capital levy, Cyprus's bank deposit confiscation, or outright sovereign defaults—likelier by the day.

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