
	by David Galland
	
	May 4, 2012
	from 
	FinancialSense Website
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	
	If history has taught one certain lesson, it is that the less fettered an 
	economy, the better humankind is able to do what it does best: run from 
	trouble and run toward opportunity. In this way mistakes are quickly 
	resolved and progress assured.
	
	Conversely, the deeper the muck of regulation, mandates, taxes, subsidies 
	and other bureaucratic meddling, the slower we humans are in following our 
	natural instincts until the point that progress is slowed or even stopped.
	
	It is said that history doesn't repeat itself, but it often rhymes. In the 
	current circumstances, it appears that enough time has passed that current 
	generations have completely forgotten the critical connection between the 
	ability of humans to freely pursue their aspirations and economic progress.
	
	You can see this ignorance in the popular demand for even more, not less, 
	meddling in the affairs of humankind. Should this trend continue - and for 
	reasons I will touch on momentarily, I firmly believe it will - then the 
	aspirations of the productive minority will soon be dampened by ever higher 
	taxes and other attempts to "level the playing field" and the global 
	economy, already in tatters, will fall off the edge.
	
	There is no more timely nor acute example of this growing trend than what is 
	currently going on in France. I refer, of course, to the first round of the 
	presidential election process, scheduled for this weekend.
	
	In France, if no candidate attracts no better than 50% of the vote, then the 
	two leading candidates go to a decisive runoff vote, this time around to be 
	held on May 6.
	
	The current president, Nicolas Sarkozy, a conservative in name only, was 
	running at a fairly steady gait toward re-election (thanks to the head start 
	awarded all incumbents), 
	when leading socialist candidate Francois Hollande 
	came out with a proposal to tax anyone with an annual income of over one 
	million Euros at a rate of 75%. 
	
	 
	
	
	He also promised to add a tax on all 
	financial transactions and increase taxes on France's biggest companies to 
	35% - securing bragging rights as levying the world's third-highest 
	corporate taxes, the US being #1. 
	
	 
	
	
	This all on top of a 25% VAT, one of the 
	world's highest. By some calculations, the result of Hollande's new taxes is 
	that effectively 100% of all incomes over one million Euros will now be 
	stripped away by the state.
	
	For good measure, Hollande also promised to reverse the recent modest 
	increase in retirement age from 60 to 62 pushed through by Sarkozy. While I 
	am sure it is mere coincidence, I found it noteworthy that Mssr. Hollande's 
	campaign slogan is "Change - Now!"
	
	Remarkably, at least for those with some small understanding of economics, 
	as a result of leaning into the microphone with these proposals Hollande has 
	galloped ahead of all other potential contenders and is now projected to 
	finish nose by nose with Sarkozy.
	
	After which the also-rans will be removed from the race, freeing their 
	supporters to share their affections elsewhere. Given that the leading 
	contender for third place with an estimated 14% of the vote is one Jean-Luc Mélenchon - charitably categorized as "far left", a label that can be 
	applied to most of the other candidates - it is projected that the 
	"conservative" Mssr. Sarkozy will go down in double-digit flames come May 6.
	
	Bringing to mind the prophetic utterance of Louis XV: 
	
		
		"Après moi, le déluge."
	
	
	
	The deluge in Louis' case manifested as the murderous affair commonly known 
	as the French Revolution.
	
	 
	
	
	In the case of Mssr. Hollande taking up residence 
	in the Palais de l'Élysée, the deluge is likely to manifest in the form of 
	rising interest rates as investors look to protect against an acceleration 
	in the country's debt to GDP ratio, already projected to hit almost 90% this 
	year, exacerbated by a flight of capital, investors, entrepreneurs and large 
	businesses.
	
	As is the nature of such things, because of the aforementioned predilection 
	of humans to run from trouble, we likely won't have to wait for Mssr. 
	Hollande to be formally enshrined in the gilded halls for the trouble to 
	start - it will begin within days and maybe even minutes of the handicappers 
	concluding that his ascendency is a sure thing.
	
	Given that France is the third-largest economy in the already-troubled 
	Eurozone, one can expect the deluge to spread, with potentially devastating 
	consequences. That the guillotines may soon be rolled out across Europe can 
	be better understood by taking into account that the Eurozone sovereign 
	deadbeats are on the hook for roughly nine trillion Euros in debt, some 
	significant percentage of which has to be rolled over to ready buyers over 
	the next couple of years. 
	
	 
	
	
	Adding weight to the problem is that, according to 
	the latest figures out of the IMF, Europe's banks may have to 
	
	sell off up to 
	3.8 trillion Euros in assets, many of them questionable, between now and the 
	end of next year. At least, if they want to remain solvent.
	
	Across the pond, the United States also has aggressive funding needs, given 
	that the "change" we experienced ourselves in the last presidential election 
	has left the government gasping for about $1.4 trillion in additional 
	funding each year.
	
	 
	
	
	Then there is Japan, officially the world's largest 
	debtor in terms of debt to GDP, where the easy availability of local funding 
	has dried up, requiring that nation to go to the international markets for 
	funding as well.
	
	The phrase "an awful lot of hogs at the trough" comes to mind.
	
	My point is not just that these governments are broke and are about to get a 
	lot more broke as interest rates rise on their many debts and financings, 
	but rather that the global trend toward a resurgence in public demand for 
	socialism in response to a worsening crisis is a certainty.
	
	How could it be otherwise when for decades now the schooling of children has 
	been delegated to functionaries of the state?
	
	For evidence, look no further than the screen swipe here. It is a quote from 
	an essay by a college student in the United States on role the government 
	should play:
	 
	
	
	
	 
	
	
	The writer of those words was a member of a Valencia University economics 
	class.
	
	 
	
	
	The professor, Jack Chandliss, asked the class to write an essay on 
	what the American dream means to them, and what they want the federal 
	government to do to help them achieve that dream. 
	
	 
	
	
	Out of 180 students 
	participating, only about 10% wanted the government to leave them alone and 
	not tax them too much, but a whopping 80% wanted the government to provide 
	pretty much the whole dream thing wrapped in a tidy bow - including free 
	college tuition and health care, jobs, even the down payment on their future 
	homes, money for retirement and hard cash, taken in the form of taxes from 
	rich people. 
	
	 
	
	
	Please take a moment to watch a worthwhile interview with the 
	professor.
	 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	
	Pretty eye-opening, eh?
	
	The point here is not complex, but it is important.
	
	With the apparatus of state education over many years serving to bamboozle 
	the populace into the hardened belief that government has a positive role to 
	play in virtually all aspects of modern life, it should come to no surprise 
	to anyone that, when push comes to shove, people are now trained to look to 
	government to solve the problems - even when it was the government that 
	created the problems in the first place.
	
	Thus, confronted with the intractable mess they have made, these governments 
	have to keep alive the mythology they have created about their omnipotence. 
	Which is easier said than done, because with things now swirling fairly 
	quickly around the drain, the mob is beginning to lose faith - and even 
	patience.
	
	Which puts these governments in a very tight spot, because the only way they 
	can actually fix things is by doing exactly the opposite of what people have 
	come to expect from their governments, which is always to do more. 
	
	 
	
	
	Put 
	simply, the only hope now is that these governments begin to reduce their 
	roles in their respective economies, and dramatically so. 
	
	 
	
	
	Concurrently, they 
	have to encourage people in their aspirations to greater wealth, by lowering 
	their taxes and unwinding the tangle of regulations they have created over 
	the last half-century.
	
	But if the governments actually tried to take these actions, the brainwashed 
	masses would be positively befuddled then outraged, as it goes against 
	everything they have been taught. Why, it would be like the Pope shuffling 
	his way to the balcony of St. Peter's Basilica and informing the doting 
	faithful that there isn't a god and never has been.
	
	Riots would follow.
	
	So it is that we find ourselves at a particularly interesting juncture in 
	the historical record.
	
	On the one hand you have a majority of the world's population who have been 
	carefully schooled into believing that the institution of government holds 
	the solution to all problems and is the source of succor to all who need it. 
	(Even that subset of the populace who has lost confidence in their current 
	government invariably believes as doctrine that the next and better 
	government can change things for the better and lead the way to the shining 
	castle on the hill.)
	
	In this mix are the politicians and their functionaries, 99.99% of whom 
	believe that, if for no other reason than their re-election prospects, they 
	have to do something to meet the demands of the public.
	
	Of course, under normal circumstances the "something" usually consists of 
	making grand-sounding speeches and otherwise blowing smoke. Today that's 
	just not going to cut it, for the simple reason that the crisis is real, it 
	is spinning out of control, and it's not going to go away unless and until 
	the markets are allowed to breathe again.
	
	Which brings us full circle to the simple truth that the brainwashed public 
	won't stand idly by while the politicians lower taxes and regulations on the 
	profit makers or cut back state pensions and guarantees or otherwise reduce 
	any of the many services the state has taken on itself to provide.
	
		
		"Between a rock and a hard place" is an inadequate phrase to describe the 
	situation.
	
	
	
	Meanwhile, the mob has started to gather, their dark mutterings heard by the 
	politicos who quickly don the red caps themselves, the better to be viewed 
	as one with the people and join in expressing outrage against the 
	capitalists who have been selected as fall guys in this unfolding drama.
	
	When confronted by reporters about the fact that his 75% tax on high-income 
	owners would raise nowhere enough revenue to offset France's towering debt 
	and social obligations, Mssr. Hollande was heard to respond:
	
		
		"It's not a question of return. It's a question of morality."
	
	
	
	When coercion and theft are considered moral, anything is possible, and none 
	of it good.
	
	While I certainly can't say how this is all going to end, I'm pretty sure 
	it's not going to end well.