Tag Archives: Cash

The “War on Cash” in 10 Spine-Chilling Quotes, by Don Quijones

The Orwellian “war on cash,” in the words of its advocates. Big Brother will soon be watching every dollar, euro, franc, yen, ruble, or yuan you spend, all in the name of convenience and to foil any “bad” people who would otherwise use cash to facilitate their misdeeds. From Don Quijones, at wolf street.com:

The war on cash is escalating. As Mises’ Jo Salerno reports, the latest combatant to join the fray is JP Morgan Chase, the largest bank in the U.S., which recently enacted a policy restricting the use of cash in selected markets; bans cash payments for credit cards, mortgages, and auto loans; and disallows the storage of “any cash or coins” in safe deposit boxes. In other words, the war has moved on from one of words to actions.

Here are ten quotes that should chill the spine of any individual who cherishes his or her freedom and anonymity:

1. Kenneth Rogoff (from the intro to his paper The Costs and Benefits to Phasing Out Paper Currency):

“Despite advances in transactions technologies, paper currency still constitutes a notable percentage of the money supply in most countries… Yet, it has important drawbacks. First, it can help facilitate activity in the underground (tax-evading) and illegal economy. Second, its existence creates the artifact of the zero bound on the nominal interest rate.”

In other words, cash (not money) is the source of all evil and must be destroyed because governments can’t trace its every movement, and it represents a limiting factor on central banks’ ability to continue their insane negative-interest-rate experiment.

2. Citigroup’s Chief Economist Willem Buiter responds to the monetary economist Charles Goodhart’s description of abolishing currency as “shockingly illiberal.”

“(T)his cost has to be seen against the cost that the anonymity of currency presents to society. Even though hard evidence is hard to come by, it is very likely that the underground economy and the criminal community are among the heaviest users of currency.”

This, I believe, is the hidden intent behind all the excited talk about banning cash: to do away with the personal anonymity it offers.

3. France’s finance minister Michel Sapin adds a dose of scare-mongering, which can do wonders. In the wake of the Charlie Hebdo murders, put much of the blame for the attacks on the assailants’ ability to buy dangerous things with cash. Shortly thereafter he announced a raft of capital controls that included a €1,000 cap on cash payments, down from €3,000. Such radical counter measures were necessary, he said, to “fight against the use of cash and anonymity in the French economy.”

http://wolfstreet.com/2015/04/25/don-quijones-war-on-cash-quotes-to-cashless-society/

To continue reading: The “War on Cash” in 10 Spine-Chilling Quotes

See also: The “War on Cash” Migrates to Switzerland, SLL, 4/26/15

The “War on Cash” Migrates to Switzerland, by Pater Tenebrarum

Cash in today’s world may be just unbacked fiat paper, but it offers anonymity, and, weirdly, while it doesn’t pay interest, it also doesn’t require paying negative interest. Holding cash allows the holder a small refuge from the moronic Keynesian war being waged on savers (see “Anti-Value: Europe’s Rape of Savers,” SLL, 3/6/15). Reason enough, it what passes for thinking among Keynesian witch doctors, to get rid of it. From Patar Tenebrarum, acting-man.com:

Banks Increasingly Refuse Cash Withdrawals – Switzerland Joins the Fun

The war on cash is proliferating globally. It appears that the private members of the world’s banking cartels are increasingly joining the fun, even if it means trampling on the rights of their customers.

Yesterday we came across an article at Zerohedge, in which Dr. Salerno of the Mises Institute notes that JP Morgan Chase has apparently joined the “war on cash”, by “restricting the use of cash in selected markets, restricting borrowers from making cash payments on credit cards, mortgages, equity lines and auto loans, as well as prohibiting storage of cash in safe deposit boxes”.

This reminded us immediately that we have just come across another small article in the local European press (courtesy of Dan Popescu), in which a Swiss pension fund manager discusses his plight with the SNB’s bizarre negative interest rate policy. In Switzerland this policy has long ago led to negative deposit rates at the commercial banks as well. The difference to other jurisdictions is however that negative interest rates have become so pronounced, that it is by now worth it to simply withdraw one’s cash and put it into an insured vault.

Having realized this, said pension fund manager, after calculating that he would save at least 25,000 CHF per year on every CHF 10 m. deposit by putting the cash into a vault, told his bank that he was about to make a rather big withdrawal very soon. After all, as a pension fund manager he has a fiduciary duty to his clients, and if he can save money based on a technicality, he has to do it.

http://www.acting-man.com/?p=37037

To continue reading: The “War on Cash” Migrates to Switzerland

See also The “War on Cash” in 10 Spine-Chilling Quotes,” SLL, 4/26/15

Go to an ATM and the Last Thing You’ll Get Is Cash, by Bill Bonner

Something to think about, and to make contingency plans for (i.e., keep a substantial amount of cash in a safe and accessible place), from Bill Bonner, on theburningplatform.com:

Back in the Day …
The stock market paused to draw breath on Wednesday. The Dow ended up more or less where it started. Not a bad day. Not a good day either. There was no bounce after Tuesday’s dizzying slide.

September 15, 2008, was a really bad day on Wall Street. Lehman Brothers sought Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. The Dow plummeted more than 500 points.

Putnam Investments shut a $12.3 billion money-market fund. Mizuho Trust & Banking cut its profit forecast in half. And the New York Stock Exchange halted trading in Constellation Energy, after its stock dropped 57%.

But this was just the start, not the end …

The Day the Cash Disappeared
The following Thursday, the Federal Reserve noticed an odd and alarming trend: Cash was disappearing. Outflows from money market accounts topped $550 billion in less than two hours.

If that had continued, Representative Paul Kanjorski of the 11th congressional district of Pennsylvania recalled:

“The Treasury opened up its window to help and pumped $105 billion into the system. And it quickly realized it could not stem the tide. We were having an electronic run on the banks. They decided to close down the operation… to close down the money accounts. […]

If they had not done so, in their estimation, by 2 p.m. that day $5.5 trillion would have been withdrawn. That would have collapsed the US economy. Within 24 hours, the world economy would have collapsed.

We talked at that time about what would have happened. It would have been the end of our economic and political system as we know it. People who say we would have gone back to the 16th century were being optimistic.”

http://www.theburningplatform.com/2015/03/15/go-to-an-atm-and-the-last-thing-youll-get-is-cash/

To continue reading: The Last Thing You’ll Get Is Cash