| 
			  
			  
			  
			
			
  by Jeff Thomas
 25 January 2016
 from 
			InternationalMan Website
 
			  
			  
			  
			  
			 
			  
			  
			The image above is of a World War II German Panzer tank. So, what 
			does that have to do with tax havens? I'll get to that soon.
 
 But first, let's look at the 
			
			Isle of Jersey, one of the islands in 
			the English Channel. Most people think of it as a British tax haven, 
			but it's not, strictly speaking, a part of the UK and not a member 
			of the EU.
 
			  
			It's a self-governing parliamentary 
			democracy under a constitutional monarchy and has its own legal, 
			judicial, and, most importantly, financial systems. For decades, 
			it's been a choice location for those who seek to avoid taxation.
 Income tax was first created in England to pay for the Napoleonic 
			Wars (maximum: 10%) and was raised in World War II to a maximum of 
			99.25%, again to pay for warfare. It was reduced after the war, but 
			climbed again (on investment income over £20,000) to a maximum of 
			98% in 1974.
 
 Jersey emerged as a tax haven as a result. Since Jersey was not 
			obligated to pay tax to the UK, Britons increasingly deposited their 
			wealth there.
 
 It's important to mention at this juncture that most of the world's 
			tax havens first sprouted as a result of similar situations - supply 
			created in response to a clear need. Most people will abide low to 
			moderate taxation but, whenever governments have become truly 
			rapacious in taxing their people, those people have sought to escape 
			enslavement from their own governments.
 
			  
			Sometimes, this has meant physically 
			leaving the country (as so many Britons did in the 70's) and, 
			sometimes, this has meant moving one's money to a jurisdiction that 
			has either low, or no, direct taxation.
 Tax havens have a long history and, since the 70's, as taxation in 
			much of the world has been on the rise, havens have unsurprisingly 
			flourished.
 
 Not surprising, then, that the blowback from the most rapacious 
			governments has grown.
 
			  
			The Organization for Economic 
			Cooperation and Development (a euphemism if ever there was one), 
			or
			
			OECD, has led the charge, funded 
			primarily by the US but based in Paris and utilized heavily by the 
			EU as well as the US.
 The OECD claims to have as a primary goal the elimination of money 
			laundering in the world. It has successfully convinced most of the 
			world that money laundering (the practice of keeping parasitical 
			governments from stealing your wealth) is a criminal activity and 
			must be stopped.
 
 However, the true objectives of the OECD are the following:
 
				
					
					
					To eliminate the individual 
					right of privacy with regards to wealth.
					
					To force minimum tax levels on 
					all sovereign nations, so that they cannot offer freedom 
					from excessive taxation to anyone. 
			But, lest we're tempted to sympathize 
			with the OECD, it's important to mention that it also fully accepts 
			the fact that its member-countries have their own tax havens which 
			don't comply with OECD minimum standards.  
			  
			Seen in this light, the OECD is exposed 
			as more of a shakedown organization than a "force for good."
 Still, the OECD is powerful and it's taken its toll on tax havens. 
			Every two or three years, it puts the squeeze on a selection of the 
			world's tax havens, demanding new or revised minimum standards. It 
			places them on a blacklist or graylist until they cave in to the new 
			standards. Then, two or three years later, it goes after another 
			selection of havens, thereby steadily ratcheting down economic 
			freedom in the world.
 
 One of their foremost successes has been the Isle of Jersey.
 
			  
			By forcing tax equalization on Jersey, 
			Jersey has had to decide whether to increase taxation for offshore 
			depositors, or decrease taxes for locals. It chose the latter and, 
			as a result, has experienced a shortfall in the government kitty, 
			resulting in layoffs for public service workers, cuts in funding for 
			road repair, sewage services, education, etc.  
			  
			Jersey appears to be 
			on the ropes as a result.
 So the big question is,
 
				
				"Will the OECD reach its goals?"
				 
			In five or ten years' time, will the 
			only tax havens be in places like 
			
			Delaware, where the 
			government-sanctioned tax haven follows the "bad practices" that the 
			OECD has called "criminal"?   
			At present, no one has the answer to 
			that question, but what we can say is that we're witnessing The 
			Great Race.  
			  
			The economies of all the OECD 
			member-nations are in trouble. Having destroyed their own economies 
			through massive debt, they're grasping for every tax dollar they can 
			get their hands on to keep the house of cards from collapsing. The 
			inevitable collapse is getting ever closer, so the hope is to scoop 
			up as much wealth by whatever means possible before the fall.  
			  
			This is critical as, after the fall, the 
			credit will evaporate. The governments will no longer be able to 
			fund the costly agencies necessary to track down and confiscate the 
			wealth of their citizens.
 This is therefore a race against time, which brings us back to the 
			Panzer in the photo.
 
 The Panzer tank was critical to German advance in World War II.
 
			  
			In the 1940's, if you heard one coming, 
			you ran like hell. But they ran on gasoline. The Nazi command 
			recognized early in the war that, unless they captured the oil 
			fields in Russian-held Romania, the German war machine would 
			literally "run out of gas."
 As risky as it was, it was essential to attack Russia. The attack 
			became increasingly desperate, since the Germans fully understood 
			that their end was on the horizon if they did not succeed (Can we 
			see any similarity between this and a government near us?).
 
 The Germans failed to conquer Romania. Then, in 1945, at the Battle 
			of the Bulge, the advance by Panzer tanks came to a halt. Had they 
			reached the front lines, they would have won the day for Germany.
 
			  
			But, instead, they ran out of fuel in 
			mid-advance.
 As decisive as that event was, to my mind, there is a connected 
			event that's more significant to us today. When the tanks ran out of 
			gasoline, the crews left the tanks and simply began to walk back to 
			Germany.
 
			  
			Most were later rounded up by the Allies and they went 
			along peacefully.
 The great significance of this event is that, no matter how much 
			bluster a political or military leadership presents, and no matter 
			how obediently the soldiers respond to such posturing, once it's 
			clear that the game is up, the pretence amongst the soldiers 
			evaporates. If an army learns in advance that an end is inevitable 
			and has had the requisite time to think over the situation in 
			advance, it simply awaits the tipping point.
 
			  
			When that occurs, they're less likely to 
			make a panicked, futile last stand. The foreknowledge informs them 
			to be prepared in advance to simply walk away.
 So, to return to The Great Race by many governments today, what we 
			are witnessing is a last-ditch effort to squeeze as much wealth as 
			possible from their citizens before those governments run out of gas 
			or, in this instance, run out of credit.
 
 At some point in the not-so-distant future,
 
				
					
					
					creditors will dump 
			treasuries back into the EU and US markets
					
					stock and bond markets 
			will crash
					
					currencies will crash
					
					debt defaults will take place
					
					banks that are seemingly too big 
					to fail will fail and there will be no fund from which to 
					bail them out 
			What we can expect will be an increasingly desperate attempt to rob 
			people of their personal wealth.  
			  
			The situation will ramp up to a 
			draconian level. Then, quite suddenly, the crisis will be upon us. 
			The dreaded tanks will run out of fuel - the governments will lose 
			the economic power to continue their advance against economic 
			freedom.
 The goal for each individual who values his freedom might then be to 
			avoid being the low-hanging fruit until that day, so that he might 
			come out intact on the other side.
 
 
			  
			Editor's Note:
 
			  
			Casey Research founder Doug Casey has 
			been warning of a currency collapse. He believes a collapse of major 
			currencies could wipe out trillions of dollars in wealth, including 
			pensions.  
			  
			Here's Doug: 
				
				It's going to be much more severe, 
				different, and longer-lasting than what we saw in 2008 and 
				2009… The U.S. created trillions of dollars to fight the 
				financial 
				crisis of 2008 and 2009.    
				Most of those dollars are still 
				sitting in the banking system and aren't in the economy. Some 
				have found their way into the stock markets and the bond 
				markets, creating a stock bubble and a bond super-bubble. 
				   
				The higher stocks and bonds go, the 
				harder they're going to fall. 
			Unlike most people, Doug Casey has actually lived through a 
				currency crisis. He was in Argentina when its currency collapsed 
				in 2001 during the largest sovereign debt default ever. 
			   
			By making smart investments, he even 
				managed to make a large gain on his money in the aftermath of 
				the crisis.     |