Thanks to Frank McSkasy - he has got things absolutely right. It does not even need to be posed as a question - no doubt about it!
John
Key advocates theft by Banks?
When
profits for New Zealand’s four largest banks are at a staggering
$3.5 billion (for 2011/12) – an increase of 22% – then that must
raise serious questions why Dear Leader is even considering making
depositors pay for any potential future bailout.
Recent
events in Cyprus have once again brought the global financial sector
into sharp public consciousness. This time, as well as a bailout,
there was a serious – and ominous - demand from the EU that
Cyprus make a “one off” levy (or tax) on the savings of Cypriots
and others living in that country.
Acknowledgement:
NZ
Herald – Hard EU bailout terms anger Cypriot savers
Deposits
up to and over €100,000 ($158,000) would be levied with
a 9.9% tax whilst below that threshold would be pay a
‘lower’ portion of 6.75%.
Unsurprisingly,
the proposed tax resulted in a run on cash withdrawals at ATMS (see:
Cypriots
asked to surrender up to 10 percent of bank balances in return for EU
bailout);
banks closed their doors (see: Fury
as banks closed to avert run);
global sharemarkets were affected (see: Stock
Markets Fall Amid Fears Of New Eurozone Crisis);
and the British government was forced to fly in one million euros to
pay military personnel (see: One
Million Euros Heading To Island For British Military Personnel
).
Pressure
on the Cypriot government was such that in the last 48 hours, the
Savings Tax was dumped (see: Rejection
of Deposit Tax Scuttles Deal on Bailout for Cyprus).
The Cypriot Parliament voted thirtysix against, with nineteen
abstaining. It is noteworthy that not one politician risked his/her
life by voting for the proposal.
Europeans.
They know how to put pressure on their elected representatives.
Meanwhile,
back home, in the Land of the Long White Cloud and several million
sheep…
.Key’s
statement here is chilling,
“At
the end of the day we’re talking about emergency provisions. These
banks are heavily regulated, they have significant oversight and
lender of last resort facilities at the Reserve Bank.
This
is really in the event that a bank got itself in such a terrible mess
that it fell over and had to restart again.”
Acknowledgement:
IBID
If
that is supposed to be reassuring – it is not. In fact, if
anything, this is a clear warning to every single New Zealander that
if a bank gets into trouble – or if there is even a hint
of trouble – to get in quickly and withdraw every cent that a
depositor might have.
If
a bank gets in trouble, and has a crippling run on deposits, it will
be as a direct consequence to Key’s plan to dip into people’s
savings to bail out that institution,
The
Reserve Bank’s Open Bank Resolution (OBR) plan, due to come into
effect at the end of June, would mean a partial loss on all deposits
if a bank failed in New Zealand, in order to fund the bank’s
bailout.
Acknowledgement:
Fairfax
media – Reserve Bank scheme news knocks kiwi
Ironically,
this is where Libertarians – who consider all taxation as theft –
may have a point.
Taxation
is one thing. We pay it so we can enjoy the benefits of a modern
society and economy. Roads, bridges, schools, hospitals, police, etc,
do not materialise out of thin air.
Dipping
into people’s savings accounts – which has already been taxed one
way or another – is not a tax. It is expropriation.
Expropriatiion
– that dreaded word which National and it’s supporters levy
against the Left when we talk about re-nationalising State assets.
But which evidently is ok if a bank goes bust and has to be bailed
out?
If
this principal is to be applied across all sectors of society and the
economy, then one could imagine that employees and sub-contractors of
Mainzeal should have been taxed to bail out that company. Why should
a bank be different to a construction company? Is there a difference?
If
this expropriation of deposits was ever to happen, do the depositors
gain any benefit? Do they gain shares in the Bank as compensation?
Or, if not, does that mean that shareholders gain the benefit of
other people’s money being used to prop up their investments?
One
could imagine an invalid on a WINZ benefit having his/her
meagre savings “taxed” to bail out a bank – to preserve an
investor’s shareholding that may be worth millions of dollars. This
isn’t justice or common sense, this is nasty, medieval,
“robber Baron” stuff.
The
biggest irony here is that, according to the principals of the free
market, this is a kind of subsidy to a business – a subsidy
enforced by the State, against the will of people who are not even
shareholders in a particular bank.
Even
marxists would balk at such extreme State power to seize people’s
money. They’d simply nationalise the bank and be done with it.
Depositors would still have their modest savings left intact and
untouched.
Key’s
proposal is not just crazy from almost every perspective – it is an
insult to our intelligence. Especially when banks are doing very well
with their profits,
When
profits for New Zealand’s four largest banks are at a staggering
$3.5 billion (for 2011/12) – an
increase of 22%
– then that must raise serious questions why Dear Leader is even
considering making depositors pay for any potential future bailout.
Shouldn’t
the banks be looking at a deposit insurance scheme of some sort?
You’d think so, wouldn’t you?
Perhaps,
though, an event like this is what might be required to jolt New
Zealanders out of their collective complacency. It’s only when the
middle classes are hit hard in their wallets, that they stop being
passive consumers and start to reassert themselves as active
citizens.
Because,
my fellow Kiwis, you can bet your last dollar (before the banks seize
it) that John Key’s $50 million will be somewhere else – probably
safe in some Swiss Bank account.
The
people of Cyprus (and Iceland) have shown us the way.
Addendum
Remember
the so-called “Light Bulb” and “Shower Heads” affairs, in
2008, where National slammed the then-Labour Government as engaging
in “Nanny State” politics? (see: Showers
latest target of Labour’s nanny state
) National’s Nick Smith said,
“People
should be free to use as much water as they like when showering,
provided they don’t expect others to pay for their profligacy.
User-pays is a far better approach than nanny state.”
So
using eco lightbulbs and smaller shower flows, to conserve
electricity and water is nasty “Nanny Statism”.
But
going into people’s savings accounts; stealing their money; and
handing it over to banks – is all hunky dory? Well, I’m glad
that’s settled.
(Cue
theme music to ‘Monty Python’s Flying Circus’.)
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