Capital Controls Are Coming

Guest Post by Nick Giambruno via International Man

Capital Controls

The carnage always comes by surprise, often on an otherwise ordinary Saturday morning…

The government declares a surprise bank holiday. It shuts all the banks. It imposes capital controls to stop citizens from taking their money out of the country. Cash-sniffing dogs, which make drug-sniffing dogs look friendly, show up at airports.

At that point, the government is free to help itself to as much of the country’s wealth as it wants. It’s an all-you-can-steal buffet.

This story has recently played out in Greece, Cyprus, Argentina, and Iceland. And those are only a few recent examples. It’s happened in scores of other countries throughout history. And I think it’s inevitable in the U.S.

I believe the U.S. dollar will lose its role as the world’s premier reserve currency. When that happens, capital controls are sure to follow.

This is why it’s crucial to your financial future to understand what capital controls are, how they are used, and what you can do to protect yourself.

Why Governments Impose Capital Controls

Think of the government as a thief trying to steal your wallet as you (understandably) try to run away. With capital controls, the thief is trying to block all the exits so you can’t reach safe ground.

A government only uses capital controls when it’s desperate…when it can no longer borrow, inflate the currency, tax, or steal money in one of the “normal” ways.

In most cases, governments use capital controls in severe crises. Think financial and banking collapses, wars, or chronic economic problems. In other cases, they’re just a way to control people. It’s much more difficult to leave a country when you can’t take your money with you.

Regardless of the initial catalyst, capital controls help a government trap money within its borders. This way, it has more money to confiscate.

As strange as it sounds, capital controls are often politically popular. For one, they are a way for a government to convince people it’s “doing something.” The average person loves that.

Two, a government can usually convince people that moving money offshore or investing in foreign assets is only for rich tax evaders or the unpatriotic. If freedom and private property matter to you at all, you know that’s obviously false.

How It Happens

For the unprepared, it’s like a mugging…

To be effective, capital controls have to be a surprise. Alerting people in advance would defeat the purpose. Weekends and holidays are the perfect time to catch people off guard.

Here are the four most common forms of capital controls:

1. “Official” Currency Exchange Rates

The government’s official rate for converting foreign currency to local currency is always less favorable than the black market rate (more accurately called the free market rate).

This applies to official prices for gold, too.

Getting the more favorable black market rate usually involves informal transactions on the street. Of course, this is technically illegal.

However, should you follow the law and exchange money at the official rate, it amounts to a wealth transfer from you to the government. The wealth transfer equals the difference between the free market rate and the official rate. It’s a form of implicit taxation.

2. Explicit Taxation

A government might impose explicit taxes to discourage you from buying foreign investments, foreign currencies, or gold. India tried this a few years ago by imposing a 10% tax on gold imports.

Another tactic is taxing money transfers out of the country…say 20% on any amount transferred to a foreign account. In this case, you could still move your money, but it would cost you.

Governments want you to hold your wealth inside the country and in the local currency. Ultimately, this makes it easier for them to tax, confiscate, or devalue with inflation.

3. Restrictions and Regulations

A government might restrict how much foreign currency or gold you can own, import, or export. It might require you to get permission to take a certain amount of money out of the country. The cap is often only a couple thousand dollars.

4. Outright Prohibition

This is the most severe form of capital control. Sometimes a government explicitly prohibits the ownership of foreign currencies, foreign bank accounts, foreign assets, or gold, or the moving of any form of wealth outside the country.

Capital Controls in the U.S.

The U.S. government has used capital controls before. In 1933, through Executive Order 6102, President Roosevelt forced Americans to exchange their gold for U.S. dollars. It’s no surprise that the official government exchange rate was unfavorable. The U.S. government continued to prohibit private ownership of gold bullion until 1974.

Today, with no conceivable end to the U.S. government’s runaway spending, sky-high debt, and careless money printing, I think it’s only a matter of time until the government decides capital controls are the “solution.” There’s no doubt statist economists like Paul Krugman would cheer it. All it would take is the stroke of the president’s pen on a new executive order.

Whatever the catalyst, it’s critical to prepare while there’s still time.

What Could Happen if You’re Too Late

Capital controls are almost always a prelude to something worse. It might be a currency devaluation, a so-called “stability levy,” or a bail-in.

Whatever the government and mainstream media call it, capital controls are a way to trap your money so it is easier to steal. Anything they don’t steal immediately, they box in for future thefts.

What You Can Do About It

The solution is simple.

Place some of your savings outside your home country by setting up a foreign bank account.

That way, no one can easily confiscate, freeze, or devalue your savings at the drop of a hat. A foreign bank account will help ensure that you have access to your money when you need it the most.

In 2013, Doug Casey and I visited Cyprus, right after the government imposed capital controls. We met numerous Cypriots who had seen the writing on the wall and had chosen to take action before the crisis.

By doing so, they kept their money safely out of the hands of a thieving government. While everyone else was forced to keep their money in the country, those who had moved their money ahead of time were free to do as they wished and were spared from the bank deposit confiscation.

There’s an important lesson here.

Despite what you may hear, obtaining a foreign bank account is completely legal. It’s not about tax evasion or other illegal activities. It’s simply about legally diversifying your political risk by putting your liquid savings in sound, well-capitalized institutions.

It’s becoming harder and harder to open a foreign bank account. Soon, it could be impossible. It’s important to act sooner rather than later – even if you don’t plan to use the account immediately.

Even without capital controls, it still makes sense to move some of your savings to a foreign bank where it can be kept safe.

Editor’s Note: Setting up a bank account outside of your home country protects you from capital controls, lightning government seizures, bail-ins, other forms of confiscation, and any number of dirty government tricks.

Offshore banks offer another benefit: They are usually much safer and more conservatively run than banks in your home country.

Despite what you may hear, offshore banking is completely legal. It’s not about tax evasion or other illegal activities. It’s simply about legally diversifying your political risk by putting your liquid savings in sound, well-capitalized institutions where they are treated best.

It’s no secret that it is becoming harder and harder to open a foreign bank account. Soon it could be impossible. This is a strong incentive to act sooner rather than later – even if you don’t plan to use the account immediately.

The good news is favorable banking options still exists…

That’s why New York Times best-selling author Doug Casey and his team have created a comprehensive offshore banking guide outlining our favorite banks and offshore banking jurisdictions. It includes crucial information on the limited jurisdictions that still accept American clients and allow them to open accounts remotely with small minimums. Click here to download the free PDF now.

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10 Comments
None Ya Biz
None Ya Biz
January 24, 2021 9:06 am

I’ve known this for quite some time. They are now just getting this? Amazing!

Anonymous
Anonymous
January 24, 2021 9:22 am

I’m thinking eliminating the capital gains tax rate to keep the tax surfs in their state and freeze existing home sales in red states.

Either way at least at the state level. Blue state tyrants will impose exist taxes on the tax surfs.

KaD
KaD
January 24, 2021 11:00 am

Does anyone actually have a foreign bank account? How does that work? I’m assuming you just can’t hit the ATM for a withdrawal.

Da Perfessor
Da Perfessor
  KaD
January 24, 2021 12:10 pm

You are correct, KaD, generally you cannot.

Further, you will have some extra forms to file as part of your 1040 AND….

if the account, or aggregate of multiple accounts, exceeds USD$10,000 for any portion of the tax year? Then you also have to file an FBAR with FinCen. This is separate from federal tax filing and failure to comply is insanely expensive.

Should you want wealth offshore, real estate or valuable goods in a private vault are likely a better option. Admittedly, one needs a few hundred grand available to play in those pools…and a tax accountant/lawyer who is savvy to the game. There are a lot of devils in the details.

Da P

August
August
  KaD
January 24, 2021 12:12 pm

I live a few miles from Canada, lived and worked Down Under, and have had foreign bank accounts for decades; the only real downside is that they make your tax filings more complicated. You can indeed hit a US ATM for withdrawals, but unless your foreign account is USD-denominated you will be likely be performing a reportable transaction, realizing a capital gain or loss on the funds involved; there are also assorted fees which may consume 3% or so of the amount withdrawn.

Under FATCA know-your-customer rules, you will probably have to open any foreign account in person, which obviously involves foreign travel. Some reputable banks (e.g. ANZ or Westpac in Australia) will allow you to open, and fully fund, an account on-line, but they will still require an in-person visit at some point within a twelve-month period, with government issued photo-ID in hand, typically your US passport.

You can open a Canadian personal bank account (though not a brokerage account), but this will probably require a Canadian mailing address of some sort. At the moment, though, only holders of Canadian passports or visas can travel to Canada.

Any foreign financial account MUST be reported to the US Government, unless the aggregate balance of all your foreign accounts is less than $10,000. Non-reporting is very unwise, unless you are skilled at criminal tax evasion.

FWIW holding physical PM, in any amount, in a foreign vault or box does NOT constitute a “foreign financial account”; also FWIW, Perth Mint deposits/certificates, or similar instruments, ARE considered to be “financial accounts”.

ED II
ED II
January 24, 2021 1:35 pm

“I believe the U.S. dollar will lose its role as the world’s premier reserve currency. When that happens, capital controls are sure to follow.”

Once the $ loses reserve status, it will be worth less than dog crap, correct? If so, why would politicians care what you do with your $/dog crap?

ED II
ED II
January 24, 2021 1:38 pm

“Two, a government can usually convince people that moving money offshore or investing in foreign assets is only for rich tax evaders or the unpatriotic. If freedom and private property matter to you at all, you know that’s obviously false.”

I’d support capitol controls for corporations. Without reigning in the corporations, we are toast.

ED II
ED II
January 24, 2021 1:47 pm

“Governments want you to hold your wealth inside the country and in the local currency. Ultimately, this makes it easier for them to tax, confiscate, or devalue with inflation.”

Doesn’t America tax Americans anywhere they are in the world already?

General
General
January 24, 2021 1:59 pm

I have a foreign bank account. But it has almost nothing in it. I prefer to have funds in a crypto account. Governnments can’t steal it.

YourAverageJoe
YourAverageJoe
  General
January 24, 2021 4:15 pm

Wait till the lights go out.