Cyprus
The recent economic turmoil in
Cyprus once again displays how clueless and disconnected the ruling elite are
from the reality of people’s lives; once again provides a striking example of
their desire, nay obsession, to minimize impacts on the wealthy by taking from
the poor.
Cyprus has gained a lot
economically by being a haven for offshore banking – their banks’ assets are
several times the economy - and so it was easy for the Troika – IMF, European
Central Bank and European Commission – to look for bailout money from account
holders. A large percentage are owned by Russians and a good percentage of that
is shady money being laundered, so to penalize the country they devised a
scheme that would levy a one-time tax of 6.7% on accounts of less than €100,000
and 9.9% on accounts over €100,000.
That was a bald-faced attempt to
steal from the poor, while concurrently minimizing losses for the rich. Before
that proposal was made, it was believed by all depositors in all European banks
that all accounts under €100,000 were insured, guaranteed, rock solid. Up until
that point, all felt safe that nothing less than a total breakdown of society
would jeopardize their savings.
Instead, people with €1000 in the
bank were expected to do their share, to the tune of €67, to save their incompetent banksters.
After all, if the little people weren’t taxed than the rich would have to pay a
lot more. That made it an easy step to propose reneging on their previous hard-wired
guarantee. Not only did all hell break loose in Cyprus, and all legislators in
parliament either voted against the proposal or abstained, but now, regardless
of the Troika’s insistence that that was a one-off and only applied to Cyprus
and no other average people would be forced to assist in bailing out banks in
the other Eurozone countries experiencing financial difficulties, nobody will
be able to trust that €100,000 guarantee. It’s finished, nobody with money in
the bank will feel completely safe again.
They then tried to float basically
the same idea but exempt the first €20,000, but that was only marginally more
acceptable than the first rip-off plan. The latest proposal is that only deposits
above €100,000 would get hit, which is they way it should’ve been from the
start.
A guarantee is a guarantee. If you had €100,001 in the bank, you knew the first €100,000 was protected, but that you were taking a chance on the last €1. Especially if you were putting your money in a notorious offshore banking center, unless you are a complete idiot, you had to know there was a good chance, however remote, that you could lose out. That’s what capitalism is supposed to be all about; You invest, you speculate, you take your chances; you win some, you lose some. Instead the elite seek to protect banksters and their investors and wealthy depositors at all costs and the little people are left to foot the bill and then fend for themselves.
A guarantee is a guarantee. If you had €100,001 in the bank, you knew the first €100,000 was protected, but that you were taking a chance on the last €1. Especially if you were putting your money in a notorious offshore banking center, unless you are a complete idiot, you had to know there was a good chance, however remote, that you could lose out. That’s what capitalism is supposed to be all about; You invest, you speculate, you take your chances; you win some, you lose some. Instead the elite seek to protect banksters and their investors and wealthy depositors at all costs and the little people are left to foot the bill and then fend for themselves.
The elite have gotten so isolated
from masses they live in their own personal bubble and can no longer relate to
the real world of the 99%. Like when Romney was asked what a person could do
when they couldn’t find a job in a very tough market for job-seekers, he said, Ask
your parents for money to start a business. Yes, very simple, ask your parents.
Personally, I prefer in all the
chaos afoot that Cyprus is ‘forced out of the Eurozone’. As mentioned in a
previous post, leaving the Euro and having their own currency will not stop most
transactions in the country being in Euro. Having their own currency used
alongside the Euro, as happens in Cambodia where about 80 to 90% of all
transactions are in US Dollars, will give them some flexibility. What Cyprus ‘leaving’
the Euro would do is begin a two-tiered currency system in many European
countries in which Euro and local money are used side-by-side. It would also be
two-tiered in the sense that the Euro would be a master currency backed by and
used exclusively in the strongest northern countries – Germany, France,
Netherlands, Belgium, Austria - with the remainder of individual states issuing
their own currencies for local transactions; for instance, all government
salaries and payments to government offices would be in local money. Once the
local money finds its proper value - it would be volatile at first - the individual
states would try to maintain it within a narrow range compared to the Euro.
Cambodia, for instance, has kept its currency within a 5% range of value
compared to the USD for the 11 years I’ve lived in the country, so it’s
accepted along with dollars with little or no discounting and there’s no need
to recalculate every day.
Regardless of how the bailout
evolves, Cypriots are in for serious hard times with massive unemployment and punishing
austerity for as much as a decade. They got rich off of being an offshore
banking haven, now they will pay the price. Once again, the lure of big bucks
casts aside all doubts, restraints and reason and it’s full speed ahead until
the ship hits an iceberg.
Singapore
In February, Singapore experienced
its largest ever demonstration; 4000 people turned up to protest against the
government’s push for increased immigration. People tend not to protest there
since they are wealthy and relatively content in the world’s number one nanny
state, not to mention the government oppressively and forcefully frowns upon
such activity.
The demonstration, along with the
loss of a seat in the legislature to the opposition in a by-election, quite
stunned the ruling elite. The Lee family, which has ruled the city-state since
independence in the sixties, now has to contend with the largest opposition
ever – they now have 7 seats in the 87 seat body. Until recently, the largest
opposition contingent was four. That is not because 95% of the population has
always solidly backed the government, rather the government has devised a painless
(for them) and bloodless means of eliminating all official dissent.
The first time an opposition
member of parliament makes a statement deemed to hurt the feelings of the
ruling family, he/she is sued for defamation for everything they’ve got and is subsequently
bankrupted – the government never looses such a case – and once bankrupt is no
longer eligible to sit in the legislature.
But this is the 21st
century and people over the world are finding their voices and are less able to
remain pliant and docile when they feel impacted by social changes that are not
to their liking.
Singapore’s population of 5.2
million is now 40% foreign born, up from 22% about twenty years ago. The
protest was in response to a government white paper which seeks to add another
million and a half immigrants to the city by 2030. The government insists that
the country needs more people to continue its industrial and economic growth,
but their citizens, like wealthy populations everywhere, are not much
interested in making babies. The birthrate there is even low by wealthy country
standards. They’ve tried everything including special benefits for having kids
and even a government dating service, to no avail.
As almost everywhere the government
is locked into endless growth, growth as the be-all and end-all of society, as
its guiding philosophy. Bhutan, which is promoting a Gross Happiness Index in
place of Gross Domestic Product, is probably the world’s only exception. If
Singapore has more people and more wealth, that must be a good thing, no?
However, while the government sees
immigration as a path to increased
wealth, the protesters, as the majority of the people at large, see higher
property prices, competition for jobs which lowers wages, more crowded public
transportation and strains on public services.
The question is; Growth for who?
It certainly isn’t the commoners who benefit, it’s strictly the elite who
benefit from growth in a mature economy. Growth can be justifiable in a developing
country which has large numbers of desperately poor people. In developed
countries, small places can be improved by expansion if that growth adds
intellectual and financial opportunity, but once a location reaches a certain
size, it’s mostly downhill, at least in terms of livability. Sure there’s lots
of money to be made in megalopolises, but if you’re in a place like LA and have
to spend two to four hours a day commuting, the money no longer has the same
value.
Some countries with large
geographic areas but small populations, such as Canada and Australia, can
benefit from immigration, but Singapore with an area the size of New York City
and a projected 7 million people – about the same as NYC - will be just as
crowded and difficult to live in, especially for the lower classes. The wealthy
have no concerns about housing prices or overburdened public transportation.
The country’s legislators earn more than a million dollars a year, so would
have little concept for what their constituents deal with on a daily basis.
Singapore’s rulers have never had
to consider the people’s wishes before and I’m sure they’ll continue to use
their defamation magic to try to quash their token opposition, but the tide is
turning and they will be forced to listen to the people.
Personally I’m a fan of
immigration, at least in theory. I’m one myself, though few would refer to me
that way, but after 11 years in Cambodia, what else could I be? One could even
consider me an economic migrant, since I could not make it in my native land
without abject penury and bemoaning my fate 24/7. Cambodia’s lax immigration
policy has brought hundreds of thousands of relatively wealthy expats to live
here. My lowly pension is still several times Cambodia’s per capita income so I’m
making a positive contribution in spite of it all.
Immigration would also be a good
idea for countries like Korea, which has the world’s most homogeneous
population and Japan with the second most, even though both countries are
relatively crowded, because they desperately need lessons in and experience
with relating to diverse peoples.
As a long time expat estranged
from my own country, it’s unsurprising that I believe that one of the best
movements for the world is immigration that mixes people up and gets us closer
to understanding each other. That isn’t to say it isn’t extremely important
that immigration happen at a slow measured pace otherwise backlashes that have destabilizing
impacts are possible.
Welcome to the world.