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Buy Gold, Be Smart,
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How the government tries to fleece you and what you
can do about it
After a relaxing Thanksgiving break, I anticipated to
return to work in a lighter frame of mind. However, the following item from
FOX News crushed that hope right away:
Lawmakers Propose 'War Surtax' to Pay for Troop Increase in
Afghanistan
Two top Democrats say they want to impose a new tax on the
wealthy to finance any increase in U.S. troops for the Afghanistan
war.
Rep. David Obey, D-Wis., chairman of the purse
string-controlling House Appropriations Committee, is calling the idea a
"war surtax." He said that just as the federal government is
expected to pay for its proposed intervention in the health care sector
with new taxes, any escalated involvement in Afghanistan should come with a
payment plan.
"If we have to pay for the health care bill, we should
pay for the war as well ... by having a war surtax," Obey told ABC
News in an interview that aired Monday. "The problem in this country
with this issue is that the only people that has to sacrifice are military
families and they've had to go to the well again and again and again and
again, and everybody else is blithely unaffected by the war."
Readers of my free missive, Casey’s Daily Dispatch, know
I’m vehemently opposed to the doomed adventure in Afghanistan. On
that front alone, the idea of a war tax is like a shard of glass in my
eye.
But it’s even worse than that. It shows just how
degraded this country has become – picking the pockets of the
productive is now pretty much the only remaining source of funding the
administration and its allies can imagine.
Just to be sure we keep this in perspective: At this
moment, if you earn more than $250,000 a year (which isn’t what it
used to be, given the steady erosion of inflation over the last 30 years),
you will pay federal income taxes of about 35%, no estate taxes, and a 15%
capital gains tax should the money you put at risk in the market return a
profit.
As soon as next year – if the government moves up
the expiration of the Bush tax cuts, as I very much expect them to –
the top tax bracket will go to 39%. On top of that, the current healthcare
legislation will add a 5.4% surcharge. Then, add in the Democrats’
proposed 5% war tax. So straight up we’re talking 49%.
Then there’s a near doubling of capital gains taxes,
from 15% to as high as 28%. And, of course, the return of the estate
tax.
But that’s just for starters, because everywhere you
look states and municipalities are raising taxes and fees, and attorney
generals, taking a page out of Caligula’s playbook, are casting about
for their next deep-pocketed victim.
At the end of the day, the top tax rate in the U.S.,
starting as early as next year, will soar way over 50% of income. While
further number crunching is required, it is a very safe assumption that top
income earners will soon be paying over 65% of their income in taxes.
Which is to say, if you are in a top tax bracket, every
penny you earn between January 1 and August 25 will go straight into the
coffers of one layer of government or another.
And this while more than 40% of Americans pay no income
taxes at all.
This is just another symptom of the single biggest problem
now facing the U.S. (and for that matter, the world): the ballooning size
and cost of government. And there are no speed bumps in sight.
Even so, endless complaining won’t really do anything
other than raise the blood pressure. So, what can we actually do about it?
Some ideas:
-
Buy gold. Unless and until
there is an angry upwelling of popular discontent at the growing size of
government – and it has to be far more substantive than just a few
vocal talk radio jocks, or even 100,000 or so people peacefully gathering
on the Mall in Washington DC – the government will continue to grow,
or even just keep running at current levels, which means the destruction of
the dollar. Many tangible assets will do well, but their intrinsic value as
money means gold (and silver) will do best.
As I write, gold has again broken to a new, non-inflation-adjusted
high. As with all markets, it will fall back now and again, but the trend
is very much up.
- Buy gold shares. The leverage in the high-quality gold shares can boost your
returns by a factor of 2X to 10X, and more. Again, there will be setbacks,
but shares in the right companies with the right projects will trend higher
and higher until the Mania phase kicks in, and then things will
get really interesting.
- Be smart about taxes. Keep an eye on
Pelosi’s tax trap – if you have appreciated assets that qualify
for long-term capital gains, consider selling them before year-end to lock
in the lower capital gains tax. Likewise, if you run a business and you can
pull any income into this year, versus next, consider doing so.
-
Diversify globally. Why do it? The short version
is that it’s a big world out there, and there are a lot of places
that are incredibly beautiful, safe, and unbelievably inexpensive. For many
non-U.S. citizens, expatriating means you’ll pay no income tax, but
even if you are a U.S. citizen, there are substantial tax benefits in
moving offshore. And what you can save in cheaper everyday living allows
you to live like royalty, for a fraction of the cost. Which means you can
save more.
Personally, I favor Argentina. Some years ago I went on a
three-year quest to find paradise on earth, and Argentina was ultimately
the hands-down winner.
- Recognize the bureaucracy for what it is. These
are not “public servants” but rather an entrenched interest
group that is actively engaged in a systematic effort to look after itself,
with no regard for the damage it’s doing to your family finances and
to the country.
Now, there are two schools of thought as to how you
deal with the bureaucrats. My dear friend and partner, Doug Casey, would
tell you to take every opportunity to let the bureaucrats know you hold
them in low esteem. For example, by asking airport security personnel how
old they were before they realized they wanted to make a career out of
pawing through people’s underwear.
The second approach is to accept that the bureaucrats,
backed by the voting masses, hold most of the cards at this point. Poking
at them with a stick risks unnecessary aggravation and worse. So, keeping a
low profile and going about your business is certainly a rational
choice.
Of course, there’s no better way of maintaining a
low profile than moving to another country where you’ll be welcomed
as a visitor and not viewed as a serf.
Is there no hope? One obvious scenario is for the
Democrats to lose control of either the House or the Senate come next
November’s elections, thereby returning the nation to some form of
political gridlock. The best of all worlds, in my view. And the way things
are heading, this is now a certainty.
But before you get overly excited about the prospects of a
political solution, don’t forget the role the Republicrats have
played in bringing the nation to this sorry state over the past several
decades. If you’re holding out for an outbreak of capitalism or other
signs of fiscal sanity once Republicans regain some modicum of political
power, you are delusional. They may package their programs in
different-colored paper, but when you rip away the wrappings, you’ll
find the same statism and the same promises of a chicken in every pot.
Look after yourself – no one else is going to do it
for you.
Gold has just hit a new record-high… and the
small-cap Canadian explorers with good-sized deposits are sure to be
dragged along into the stratosphere. In the current issue of Casey’s International Speculator,
Editor Louis James names eight junior gold miners that – due
to their top-quality assets – are destined to become takeover
targets for the big players in the gold industry.
David Galland,
Managing Director
****
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