Cashless: The Coming War on Tax-Evasion and Decentralized Money
by Cris Sheridan
FinancialSense.com
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There are two
major trends taking place that are shaping up as a recipe for disaster.
On the one hand, we have massively indebted governments around the
world desperate for tax revenues and, on the other, steadily growing
multi-trillion underground economies whose main goal is to avoid
paying them.
According to
a recent study, the amount of uncollected tax revenues in the U.S.
is estimated around a whopping 500 billion dollars per year1
enough money to bailout most of Europe.
At 8 percent
of GDP, the underground or shadow economy in the U.S. is much smaller
percentage-wise than other nations like Greece (25 percent), Italy
(27 percent), or Thailand (70 percent)2,
yet, given our overall size, America's untaxed economy is larger
than “the official output of all but the upper crust of nations
across the globe…bigger than the GDP of Turkey or Austria.”3
Question is:
How long will the government allow this to last?
When times
are good and the economy vibrant, there is less incentive to crack
down on tax-evasion; but now, unemployment is at all-time highs,
income and property taxes have fallen dramatically, and the government
is supporting an increasingly large and record number of people
through a wide range of benefits.
Desperate
times call for desperate measures
In an interview
with Jim Puplava titled “Never
Underestimate the Desperation of a Broke(n) Government”, world
renowned economist, Martin Armstrong, cites numerous examples of
how the U.S. is following a well set historical pattern where, inevitably,
the “government is going to be much more aggressive to tax people,
chase them down, and put them in prison.”
Just recently,
noted author and blogger, Charles Hugh Smith, cited how California
a case-study for high taxes, regulation, and smothering bureaucracy
automatically seized funds out of a previous resident’s bank
account for not filing taxes in the year 2006 five years
after he had long moved out of state. In response to this incident,
Smith writes, “What is entirely believable is that the state of
California, desperate for revenue, is churning out dubious income
tax claims stretching back years and collecting the money without
due process.”4
If true, and
these types of aggressive acts are to become more common, it should
be fairly obvious that they won't achieve the desired results. As
taxes are raised, regulations and filing requirement made more stringent,
more and more people will merely leave the system. Eventually, the
government will have to think of a different way to collect.
We could change
current tax laws and make it less burdensome but, when given a choice
between simple or none, most people would rather choose none; and
since many realize that by doing everything in cash their transactions
are virtually untraceable, the risk of getting caught is quite tiny
compared to the benefits of keeping much more of their income.
The only option
left is to remove the very thing that fuels the underground economy
in the first place.
Cash becomes
illegal
Consider Italy
Intensifies Its All-Out War on Tax Evaders
In addition
to banning cash transactions, [Italy] has included an ad campaign
comparing tax evaders to parasites. There have been headline-grabbing
raids on stores, hotels and restaurants in affluent Italian cities.
For good measure, tax officials have also been stopping luxury
cars and asking drivers to show their licenses, then using the
information to pull their most recent tax returns.
Recently, best-selling
financial author and well-known investor, Doug Casey, offered his
perspective on this issue by pointing out that “governments hate
cash for lots of reasons…it costs a couple of cents to print a piece
of paper currency, and they have to be replaced quite often. As
the US has destroyed the value of the dollar, they’ve had to take
the copper out of pennies, and soon they’ll take the nickel out
of nickels. Furthermore, with modern technology, counterfeiters
including unfriendly foreign governments can turn
out US currency that’s almost indistinguishable from the real thing.
And the stuff takes up a lot of space if it’s enough to be of value.
So sure, governments would like to get rid of tangible currency.
They’d like to see all money kept in banks.”5
Italy or Sweden?
Aside from
how governments personally feel about cash, some societies are choosing
to abandon it voluntarily. As recently reported by the Associated
Press, cash only represents 3% of Sweden's entire economy
a trend that isn't being enforced through law but rather embraced
by a strongly technological and innovation-loving people.6
No "headline-grabbing raids", automatic seizure of bank funds, or
stopping luxury car owners to check their most recent tax returns.
Then again, Sweden is also known for having the highest tax rates
in the world.
Although the
total amount of money changing hands in America's shadow economy
is quite massive, again, with respective to our total economy it
is fairly small about 8 percent of GDP. Given the sheer convenience
and accessibility of electronic payment options almost everywhere
you go, the transition towards a cashless society is certainly "in
the cards."
However, given
the diversity of America's population, our strong desire for privacy
and longstanding hatred towards taxes, there will always be a strong
demand for some form of cash or non-traceable currencies
something I doubt the U.S. government won't try to supervise or
restrict.
Resistance
is futile. You will be assimilated
Given the trends
taking place, a hot or cold war against non-traceable decentralized
forms of currency is almost inevitable. Like Italy, the U.S. could
hit such transactions head on and declare them illegal although
not without a massive uproar. On the other hand, the government
could take a more indirect and technological approach that forces
compliance overtime.
Specifically,
we should expect to see some form of the following if the U.S. made
a goal of collecting the estimated $500 billion in potential tax
revenues:
- Make cash
transactions illegal
- Merge all
your information into one account and flag for any discrepancies
between income and expenditures
- Make it
impossible to receive any form of government-provided or government-regulated
assistance (Social Security, Medicare, health insurance, bank
loans, credit, etc.) unless all taxes are current and accounted
for
Obviously,
if cash transactions were made illegal it would be very hard for
anyone operating outside the system to freely exchange goods and
services within the wider economy. However, it’s very easy to transfer
cash balances onto a stored value card and then use that instead.
Also, people could start using gold, silver, Bitcoins,
or any other form of decentralized payment methods within various
sub-networks.
For the second
option merging all your information into a database
this would further help in cutting down uncollected revenues but
would also require voluntary participation by most non-regulated
providers of goods and services. You would also expect to see a
large number of costly and intrusive audits for those operating
businesses on a cash-basis.
The last option
slowly making it impossible to receive aid, loans, insurance
would effectively strangle the shadow economy into submission
and mitigate the chances of a revolution by declaring war on decentralized
methods of payment. Incidentally, I believe a very eye-opening glimpse
of what's truly in the works was revealed when the Social Security
Administration released a report highlighting the Big Brother right-to-access
approach in conjunction with various other government agencies.
Consider SSA
seen going 90 percent electronic
The Social
Security Administration has little choice but to move toward a
goal of processing 90 percent of all transactions electronically
in the coming decades, according to a new report adopted by an
SSA advisory panel...
The “Re-imagining
Social Security” report was published recently on the panel’s
website after being adopted by the group at a meeting in May.
In practical
terms, the full picture of SSA's electronic processing would mean
that hospitals would create an electronic medical record for each
birth and communicate data about those births to SSA, which would
set up a password-protected electronic account for each child.
Thereafter,
as adults, people could log into their personal SSA account to
verify information for jobs, name changes, widowhood, disability
and retirement. Furthermore, SSA would communicate electronically
with Medicare and with private doctors and hospitals to obtain
patients' medical information if needed for a disability or benefits
claim.
The proposed
birth-to-death electronic system described in the report does
not exist. The envisioned medical data-sharing network is based
on the Health and Human Services Department’s Nationwide Health
Information Network, and the job-verification system is based
on the Homeland Security Department’s E-Verify, neither of
which is widely used [currently]. More spending would be needed
to create the necessary systems and networks, the report states...
To serve
the small percentage of people with complex transactions or those
who are unable or prefer not to use newer technologies, SSA should
look into creating joint service centers with other federal agencies,
such as the Internal Revenue Service, the report states.
(emphasis
added)
There you have
it: the merging of all your information (and money?) into one easily
accessible electronic file. Want to get Social Security or other
benefits? Apply for a loan? Get health insurance? You’re going to
have to be part of the system. Otherwise, except to hear from the
IRS!
References
- America's
Underground Economy: Measuring the Size, Growth, and Determinants
of Income Tax Evasion in the U.S.
- Hiding
in the Shadows: The Growth of the Underground Economy
- America’s
‘shadow economy’ is bigger than you think – and growing
- Welcome
to the Predatory State of California Even If You Don't
Live There
- Doug
Casey on Cashless Societies
- In
Sweden, Cash Is King No More
April
6, 2012
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© 2012 FinancialSense.com
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