The Black Market For Gold Is Booming
23
November, 2012
The
Philippines is richly endowed with minerals. So rich, in fact, that
individuals can make an excellent living by mining illegal claims
through dangerous, primitive methods.
Like
most places, unfortunately, the Philippine government is idiotic and
continues to pass new laws and taxes in order to get their ‘fair
share’ of other people’s sweat, especially related to mining
projects.
As
the law stands, all gold and silver produced must be sold to the
Bangko Sentral, the country’s central bank. Yet after the
government started enforcing a 7% tax on precious metals last year,
most small-scale producers are now selling to smugglers instead.
According
to Assistant Central Bank Governor Manuel Torres, who heads the
bank’s refinery operations, as much as 95% of all the gold mined in
the Philippines is now being sold to smugglers and moved out of the
country illegally.
And
the trend has been accelerating. In 2011, central bank gold purchases
dropped at an annualized rate of 4%, then 76%, then 88% during the
second, third, and fourth quarters. In the first quarter of 2012,
gold purchases were down 92%. It’s staggering.
Most
of this smuggled gold finds its way here to Hong Kong, and then
onward to China, where there is a voracious demand for gold despite
rising prices.
Of
course, it’s perfectly legal to bring gold, tax-free, into Hong
Kong. This is why when Hong Kong reports its official trade
statistics, ‘gold imports’ from the Philippines are 30 times
higher than what the Philippines government reports as ‘gold
exports’ to Hong Kong!
It’s
an enormous discrepancy, and it gives a huge indication of how much
gold smuggling is really going on.
And
it’s not just the Philippines either; small-scale mining activity
is being pushed to the black market in many countries around the
world.
In
Mongolia, so called ‘ninja miners’ also use crude methods to
avoid government tax, mining and smuggling gold across the border to
China. Gold smuggling in Sierra Leone became so problematic that the
government finally had to capitulate, slashing its mining tax in half
for small-scale producers.
It’s
certainly an important lesson that governments should heed, further
proof that obtrusive attempts to impose heavy taxes only push
economic activity into the black market.
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