Ever since money was
invented and so the ability to move wealth readily from one place to another in
various forms of acceptable goods, tokens or titles to goods or tokens the
question of who should control this and how has been central to rulers and the ruled.
Some forms are more
movable than others. They might be
precious metals or stones or they might be edible domestic animals which have
other by-products. In primitive societies
much conflict arises from raiding between groups as well as title to grazing
lands.
For someone who grew up
during the great age of the cowboy film much of the global financial system is
explicable in terms of the Wild West of the USA. These bear a strong similarity
to activity of earlier centuries.
Many of the riders and
herders were the direct descendants from the medieval cattle thieves and
raiders of the Atlantic Isles. We might
recall that in the USA indigenous arable peoples lost out but later the
ranchers lost out to the farmers.
As for our modern
"capital" expressed in terms of modern currencies and financial products they have
become not just portable but moveable in vast amounts in a digital
instant. A trader who has lunched too
well can cause a financial hiccup or crisis at the tap of a key or a touch on
the screen.
There are many reasons for
capital to move. Some are the basic ones
of investing in projects or activity in other states in an open and fully legal
way. Others might be between or involving governments with a political purpose
embedded.
Increasingly, there are very
large sums moving arising from criminal sources, tax evasion and
avoidance. More worrying are the surges
of capital movement arising from the instability or collapse of either
political systems or financial systems in one state to another reckoned to be
more stable or at least friendly to those moving the money.
An article on this contemporary capital flight
uses the term Lethal Liabilities about the human cost of debt and capital
flight. It is concise and its main
reference is to The Third World contending that the ability to move wealth
easily and at will has allowed extractive and predatory elites to grow very
rich at the expense of leaving debts to the very poor.
What the various debates
in the USA, Europe and the UK are about in relation to internal financial
troubles have at their heart is that the same is happening in their own
countries. It is not just one state
preying on another, it is the financial sectors extracting capital internally
to move elsewhere.
That this is now
intermingled with high leverages and substantial speculation creates huge
risks. Only it is not the movers and
holders of the digital money who will lose it is the ordinary people doing
ordinary work. This is happening and it
is getting worse by the year.
The picture above is of
locusts. This is not just a comment; it
is a warning that too many locusts in some places could trigger a "Black
Swan" event that may just be a tipping point for another serious financial
crash.
No comments:
Post a Comment