http://money.cnn.com/2013/03/18/news/economy/europe-cyprus-bailout/index.htmlAnyone see this? TLDR; Cyprus is in a dire economic situation considering it was the banker for Greece. In order for the EU to give it money it is demanding that Cyprus levy a 10% tax on accounts >100,000E and 6.75% on less. I guess it's the EU's money that they are offering, so they can give it any caveats they want, but it seems like a really awkward way to get Cyprus to put up their portion.
3/18/2013 10:12:28 AM
The timing of this thread is funny. I had a friend from Cyprus in town this past week for a wedding and he was bitching about this to me.
3/18/2013 10:34:31 AM
While it would seem tough for anyone to be happy about someone going in to their bank account and taking out 7%, the people this really hurts is businesses and foriegn clients.
3/18/2013 10:39:17 AM
Cue a new round of fears about "contagion" spreading to the rest of Europe.
3/18/2013 11:08:24 AM
I tried to read an article about this, but i'm not sure exactly how much I'm understanding..The "haircut" might be a really really bad policy - because signals that you should move money out of your bank if its health is bad. It creates a self-fulfilling prophesy. Take the 10% of banks with the worst health, everyone moves money out to the stronger banks to avoid the haircut. Great, so now those banks have just gone under.I think we should just do away with cash-interest accounts. Either have cash with no interest and fees, or put it in a lending pool with risk. In that case, we don't need bank equity to be the float between deposits and loans. Make banks into "dumb pipes".
3/18/2013 11:38:39 AM
3/18/2013 12:15:36 PM
I thought the cuts in this specific case were progressive, based on the size of the account.
3/18/2013 12:16:35 PM
^^ see ^ (not that I endorse it, just explaining)
3/18/2013 1:08:54 PM
3/18/2013 1:09:18 PM
FOXNEWS JOURNALISM
3/18/2013 1:28:10 PM
So how is this (if it passes) anything other than legalized theft?[Edited on March 18, 2013 at 8:27 PM. Reason : Sd]
3/18/2013 8:27:31 PM
You could say that about any kind of taxes. The thing I don't like about it is that the tax would obviously push people away from using banks, which should be a safe place to keep money, they'd be better off keeping it in a safe deposit box at the bank.
3/18/2013 8:42:48 PM
The problem here is that some of the accounts were insured, and they're still getting taxed, how does that make sense?
3/18/2013 9:30:09 PM
I don't like it, but they don't have to do it if they don't want money from the central bank.The reason it's so inversely burdensome is to prevent the death of Cyprus's banking industry. Cyprus, much like many other island nations is hugely reliant on foreign money to create wealth for their banks. If you tax/steal money from large foreign depositors they will take it elsewhere. If that happens Cyprus is really screwed.
3/19/2013 8:58:33 AM
3/19/2013 9:15:05 AM
Why does anyone save in this day and age. Near 0% interest on savings accounts. Inflation. Now the threat of all out raids on savings.Might as well spend yourself into oblivion, the return on savings appears to be less than -10%.
3/19/2013 9:19:11 AM
3/19/2013 9:24:05 AM
seeing as how the entire system of private property is one of state-backed violent theft i can't really get that fired up by taxes
3/19/2013 9:46:45 AM
3/19/2013 10:07:30 AM
3/19/2013 10:09:19 AM
Before I answer that, I want to make sure you don't think being anti-private property means I think I should be allowed to take your toothbrush or family photos or home away: http://dbzer0.com/blog/private-property-vs-possessionThis one's decent too: http://www.anarchism.net/anarchism_privatepropertyorpossessionasynthesis.htmAnd, in the end, all private property is based around land. If not the surface, the natural resources lying below it. Thomas Paine kind of alludes to this in Agrarian Justice (http://www.constitution.org/tp/agjustice.htm) but he arrives at more liberal conclusions than me (Taxes, social security, etc).[Edited on March 19, 2013 at 10:16 AM. Reason : .]
3/19/2013 10:13:42 AM
3/19/2013 10:24:03 AM
No, I understand that, but anything that is designed to prevent the accumulation of wealth is, IMO, contrary to human nature and removes one of the primary motivators of people, greed. It's rare to find the person who is motivated simply by the joy of discovery or the satisfaction of a job well done.Without the possibility of additional reward or societal advancement there's little motivation for anything outside of a stagnant existence.And, though I'm sure you'd argue the point, not all wealth springs from land or natural resources. Think of how much intellectual property exists that leads directly to wealth. Think about how many people are able to accumulate wealth based on service because of extraordinary skills or even ordinary skills (consultants, football players, dog walkers, accountants).Finally, is there no ownership over your own labor, i.e. stuff Kris posted about above. No I didn't create the wood, but I did put forth the labor to plant the tree, tend to it, and then use my labor to turn it from a raw material to a useable product thereby adding real value.Of course there's also the tired old debate over what is necessary for personal use vs. what is wealth accumulation. If you can get by with the most basic type why should anyone be allowed to have something better, why should I be allowed to purchase a BMW vs. a honda civic, or should I even be allowed that choice?I'd say this thread probably isn't even the right discussion for this anyway. Cyprus's parliament will refuse this offer today.[Edited on March 19, 2013 at 10:30 AM. Reason : sfsadf]
3/19/2013 10:28:07 AM
3/19/2013 10:46:17 AM
3/19/2013 10:56:50 AM
Things are going to get ugly there.
3/19/2013 11:10:40 AM
3/19/2013 11:11:53 AM
You're seem to presupose that what you call human nature is a cause of our system and not a result of it. It's not human nature to want green pieces of paper or anything else but food, shelter, and sex. The reason we want these other things is because of things we learned, and once we talk about things we've learned, we're not talking about human nature. It's in a dog's nature to bite small children and defecate on the floor, that doesn't mean that any system that doesn't involve biting or carpet defecation won't work. A human's nature is to adapt to it's environment, whether that environment encourages greed or not is determined by systemic drivers.
3/19/2013 11:26:17 AM
3/19/2013 11:56:15 AM
3/19/2013 12:39:02 PM
3/19/2013 12:42:29 PM
3/19/2013 2:50:15 PM
^ Explain this:
3/19/2013 3:09:04 PM
3/19/2013 3:24:57 PM
3/19/2013 3:52:35 PM
3/19/2013 4:05:30 PM
3/19/2013 4:05:35 PM
3/19/2013 4:10:10 PM
That whole argument sub-thread is anarcho-lib vs. anarcho-communist, I don't subscribe to either, but can argue based on their assumptions. My views would be a red herring within that context.
3/19/2013 4:14:57 PM
BTW the Cypriot parliament voted down the measure 36-0, with 19 abstentions.
3/19/2013 4:46:19 PM
Yeah, I already mentioned that a few posts up. Sort of leaves Cyprus in a bit of a situation, because frankly, the Germans are pretty sick of throwing good money after bad in southern europe. It would have been hard to let Greece go under, harder still with Italy, but Cyprus.... I think they might tell them to go fly a kite.Cyprus had better start courting Russia for some help.
3/19/2013 5:51:17 PM
3/19/2013 6:01:57 PM
Completely agree. The further you get away from an agrarian society/economy the less possible it is to have any kind of communist or socialist system.
3/19/2013 6:05:38 PM
3/19/2013 6:30:40 PM
I thought that was sort of the debate...Besides, that wasn't really an attack on communism, just an observation.[Edited on March 19, 2013 at 6:38 PM. Reason : sdfsf]
3/19/2013 6:36:44 PM
3/19/2013 10:43:04 PM
3/20/2013 7:20:52 AM
i'm not saying they never battled over territory, but i'm saying europeans showed up to a population that was totally surprised to have force and weapons used against them.moving on, i don't understand how you can't seem to imagine any way of living other than the one way that you've lived.you say things like capitalism makes people want to work harder, but what are you saying? in capitalism, by definition, the people who profit are not the people doing the work. so, this motivation comes from essentially being told "do something that pleases me or starve outside in the cold". and even though the social structure is very fluid, and even if it may be based on merit, a system that takes the top whatever percent (let's say 0.1%) and rewards them mightily while leaving nothing for the rest is a terrible system. furthermore, this is an absolutely archaic way of looking at the world. the concept of "productivity" is incredibly overrated, and based on an expanding globe. our world is no longer expanding, and quite frankly we have no need to expand. we are at a point where we can use the technology that we have to build an infrastructure to take us into a totally different way of living, but instead we keep doing it the same way, going backwards in time if we can, b/c the people that are in charge have convinced you that it's in your best interest to work 60 hours per week for enough money to live in a house and feed your kids, meanwhile a quarter of the country is looking for work. that makes no sense. ignore money for a second (impossible i know), let's say we live in a commune of like 50 people. everyone has a job to do, and say our job is doing the dishes. if we show up one night and there's not that many dirty dishes, i don't inform you that i'm going to do the dishes and you have to go find some other work to do or else you're out of the village. we'd both do half of what was there and then go do something else. maybe it's spend more time w/ your family, maybe it's building robots. similarly, if we build robots that do all of our jobs for us, that should make our lives easier, not be a burden. being scared of a robot taking your job is the exact opposite of progress, that should be the most exciting prospect in the world, b/c it means you get to do something less menial and more interesting w/ your time.and even capitalists know this. it's very easy to find examples of companies that choose to treat their employees very well b/c they know that people are more productive when they're happy. and grinding it out for the owner does not make anyone happy except the owner.that's all not to mention that capitalism is not productive. how much money do we spend on consumer goods? on bank interest? on military exercises? on researching better bombs while children are starving and going blind from diseases that more privileged people think they have been granted immunity from by the good lord himself. that bono commercial about $2/day or whatever it is is not a joke. you could really end a huge amount of suffering just by reallocating resources that are already spent. shit, in this country we take money, oil and corn and melt it down into a substance that's worth less than what we put in and then fucking burn it, just to sell more cars. this is what productivity looks like? now i'll grant you that that's not actually capitalism, since it's based on gov't subsidies. but that brings me to yet another point. capitalism doesn't actually work, at least not in the way that you say it does. the largest chunk in our budget goes to "defense", which really means energy security and free maritime trading. if we actually went by the market, our country would shut down based on the price of oil. fortunately we don't give a fuck and take over entire countries, burning museums like nazis, propping up an absurd encampment inside of palestine just to keep things unstable, all to get oil on the cheap so that we can keep wasting it. i mean really, our national election has turned into little more than a referendum on the price of gasoline, and politicians do anything they can to keep it low.and finally, surely you feel the middle class shrinking. how does this not worry you? personal training is going to be one of the first things to go when things get really tight. so the ideal scenario for you, i would think, would be that everyone in whatever city you lived in had 1) time to get into shape and 2) disposable income. so look at where we are now, and which direction we can go in. we can either go right or left, left leads to both of these things for all people, right leads to neither of them for most people, and only one of those to most of the rest.]
3/20/2013 8:51:19 AM
ahh forget it.d[Edited on March 20, 2013 at 9:00 AM. Reason : asdfs]
3/20/2013 8:58:09 AM
^^I do agree with some of your points. I do agree that our society, and economy, waste too much time and money on consumables, material items, and working. I agree it's not as efficient, and that wealth is not distributed "fairly". I also agree that if everyone operated under utilitarian and/or communal ethics, we'd be much better off in some regards.Unfortunately, to break from the status quo towards these utopian ideals won't happen very easily. IMO, it goes against the fundamentals of human behavior/instinct for it to be feasible on massive scale (like the USA).Yes, my professional industry is a premium service. However, I don't serve the middle class primarily. But that is irrelevant. I do want more people to have more disposable income. I think every business owner agrees with that.My ideals don't shut people out of opportunity. I want anyone and everyone to have the ability to do business/act in a way that's mutually agreeable and beneficial for all parties involved. That's pretty much it. Anything beyond that is not within the scope of my beliefs.What I find funny, and what makes me vocal, is that I actually live my ideals. Taking risks and building a profitable business. I the past year I've created jobs and brought valuable services to the local economy. In my experience, most liberals and progressives want the government to do all the work of caring for society for them; rather than living their ideals and their emphatic words.
3/20/2013 10:01:25 AM