It is that way everywhere. Land purchasing and ownership is the biggest scam of all time. Government owns all land. Always have, always will. The only way it changes ownership is if a new government conquers the old one... then it becomes property of the new govt.Better than tax, convert all private land into government property with 99 years lease (in Singapore), or 50-70 years lease like in China. After you paid for your mortgage all your life, the property reverts back to the government.
Australia's Liberal Party government has announced that it will soon be illegal to purchase anything over $10,000 with cash. The government says it's "encouraging the transition to a digital society" and cracking down on tax evasion. But not everyone is happy with the move.
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The ban starts on 1 July 2019 and any payment over $10,000 will have to be made by check or credit/debit card. The government will enforce the measure by allocating roughly $300 million for what it calls the Black Economy Standing Taskforce. ...
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Australians have a strange relationship with cash - strange in the sense that they still use it. Roughly 37 per cent of all commercial transactions in Australia are made using cash. That number is just 32 per cent in the US and 15 per cent in Sweden. Many Swedes are angry about its slow move to a cashless society, arguing that going completely digital causes security concerns. And India began phasing out a whopping 86 per cent of its currency in November of 2016 by invalidating ₹500 and ₹1000 notes as legal tender.
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Today it's any sum over $10,000 in Australia, but anyone with their eyes open can see where this is going. ...
San Francisco officials voted Tuesday to require brick-and-mortar retailers to take cash as payment, joining Philadelphia and New Jersey in banning a growing paperless practice that critics say discriminates against low-income people who may not have access to credit cards.
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Reasons Households Were Unbanked
As in previous years, the 2017 survey asked unbanked households about the reasons why they did not have a bank account. Findings are similar to those reported in previous years.
• More than half (52.7 percent) of unbanked households cited “Do not have enough money to keep in an account” as a reason for not having an account, the most commonly cited reason. This reason was also the most commonly cited main reason for not having an account (34.0 percent).
• Almost one-third (30.2 percent) of unbanked households cited “Don’t trust banks” as a reason for not having an account, the second-most commonly cited reason. This reason was also the second-most commonly cited main reason (12.6 percent).
• As in previous years, higher proportions of unbanked households that previously had an account cited “Bank account fees are too high” (29.9 percent) or “Bank account fees are unpredictable” (24.9 percent) in 2017, compared with unbanked households that never had an account (21.1 and 17.0 percent, respectively).
• Higher proportions of unbanked households that were not at all likely or not very likely to open a bank account in the next 12 months cited “Don’t trust banks” (36.2 and 31.5 percent, respectively) in 2017, compared with unbanked households that were somewhat likely or very likely to open a bank account in the next 12 months (24.7 and 21.0 percent, respectively).
@Oddjob - here's a link to the FDIC itself with their bi-annual household surveys from 2017-2009: https://www.fdic.gov/householdsurvey/
The 2017 Executive Summary link is pretty informative.
ER, excusame Bron, It sounds a bit like THEFT to me.The start date for that has been delayed, I wrote about it in this week's market update https://www.abcbullion.com.au/investor-centre/pdf/china-buys-gold-as-trade-wars-escalate including a recent IMF "guide" for central bankers on how to make deep negative interest rates happen, which has to involve repression of physical cash usage:
In additional to setting a lower exchange rate between paper and digital currency (e.g. when depositing $100 cash in a bank, you only get $98 credit to your account), which is the IMF’s preferred approach, they discuss other methods of enforcing negative interest rates including:
- Cash withdrawal limits or limits on cash deposits
- Purposely keeping low inventory of cash in bank branches
- Banning storage of paper currency as a business
- Putting restrictions on flows of paper currency in and out of the country
- Retiring large denomination notes
- Abolishing paper currency outright