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Overview
The higher the rate of future inflation - the more of your current net worth
belongs to the government. Many investors do not realize the powerful financial
incentives the government will have to boost inflation rates in order to pay
for extraordinarily expensive Boomer retirement promises. From the government's
perspective, high inflation rates offer the ability to transform after-tax
investor assets into pre-tax income, which can then be taken from individuals
through the "Inflation Tax." With substantial inflation, running the
gauntlet of taxes once or twice is not enough, and even your after-tax net
worth can be repeatedly raided under government tax policy, by using the pretext
of non-existent income - that was itself created by government fiscal policy.
In this article, we will precisely demonstrate the way this deeply unfair
wealth seizure strategy works, and the multiple levels of challenges it presents.
We will review the particularly severe potential implications for conventional
investors, and illustrate by example how the one-two combination of inflation
and the inflation tax could mean that a DJIA of 75,000 by 2027 could translate
into a 73% reduction in real investor net worth. We will briefly discuss investor
solutions, some advantages of tangible assets, and close by introducing the
concept of taking advantage of the government's inflation blindness to Reverse
the Inflation Tax, so that instead of paying real taxes on illusory income,
investors can pay illusory taxes on real income.
Impossible Promises
A recent, well-publicized study by USA Today put the total of unfunded
promises by federal, state and local governments at $59 trillion. That isn't
total promises or future dollars (which would be much higher), it is the present
value anticipated shortfall compared to the current tax structure. The overwhelming
majority of this total is federal promises to future retirees in the form of
Medicare and Social Security.
That many trillions is hard to relate to, so USA Today put the numbers
in per household terms. The average American household is in debt for $516,000
to cover unfunded government obligations, or more than four times the average
mortgage and credit card debt per household. To pay off this debt, each household
would have to pay $31,000 per year for the next 75 years. A link to this article
is: http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2007-05-28-federal-budget_N.htm
How will the impossible become the possible? One answer is that the system
breaks down and collapses. The future could be multiple levels of government
all reneging on their promises to retirees, as well as the major corporations.
But, that is such a messy solution. Not just for average people, but worse
- messy for the wealthiest and most politically powerful segments of our population.
In fact, such a Doomsday scenario might jeopardize both their wealth and their
power. It would also compound the problem through depressing the tax revenues,
because everyone would be losing money, and you don't pay taxes on (nominal)
losses.
However, there is an alternative means of closingthe gap. A means that keeps
the promises paid in form (if not in substance). A means that redistributes
wealth from taxpayers to the government. A means that keeps the status quo
intact. All you have to do is make it Doomsday for the value of the dollar
- in the right way - and real costs (retiree benefits) will plummet, real tax
collections will skyrocket, and the gap will close.
There are three intertwined methods the government can use in closing the
fiscal gap through the use of inflation. The first is "Theft By Index Management",
where the official government rate of inflation rises at a different rate than
the real rate, making inflation-indexed promises easier to keep each year.
The higher the real rate of inflation, the faster this strategy delivers its
benefits to the government. The second method is "Evaporate Paper Wealth Claims" where
the government dilutes competing claims on future goods and services by retiree
investors through making the real value of their assets plummet, even while
their paper value soars higher than ever. Which opens the door for the third
strategy, that we will devote the rest of this article to exploring.
Seizing Assets Through Inflation Taxes
The easiest way to illustrate the Inflation Tax is with examples. Let's assume
that through hard work and deferred gratification, you built up $40,000 in
savings, which wasn't easy after paying all the taxes on the income as you
made it (we'll keep the initial assumptions low to avoid too many zeros). Through
judicious investing, you turned that $40,000 into a $100,000 current investment
portfolio. Which again wasn't helped by paying taxes on every dollar of gain,
but you've made it, the $100,000 is yours after-tax, and the government has
no tax claim on it.
So long as a dollar is worth a dollar, that is.
Chart I below illustrates how by changing the value of the dollar, part of
your after-tax assets can be taken by the government.

The left column represents nominal dollars. You buy almost any kind of asset
for $100,000, and hold it long enough to be eligible for capital gains tax
treatment. During that time, inflation destroys half the value of the dollar,
meaning it now takes $2 to buy what $1 used to. Our key assumption is that
your asset exactly keeps up with the surge of inflation - meaning it likely
did better than most investments. So you get $200,000 when you sell it - even
though in purchasing power or real dollar terms, the asset is unchanged in
value (the right column, and the dark green blocks and bars are real dollars).
The government does not generally recognize inflation in its tax policy, it
sees nominal dollars only (the pale yellow bars and boxes). What the government
sees is that you just made $100,000, and it wants its share, in the form of
$15,000 in capital gains taxes. Now, as long as we ignore inflation, that's
not so bad. We still have $85,000 in "profits". Indeed, that 85% after-tax
return on investment may look pretty sweet.
The
problem is when we adjust our 85% after-tax return for the technicality of
a dollar only buying what fifty cents used to. When we look at our real wealth
in terms of the goods and services we can buy with the proceeds of selling
our asset. When we go down the real dollar column on the right, and look with
our dark green economic "eyes", then we see that we bought for $100,000, we
sold for $100,000, and in terms of real wealth - our pre-tax gain is zero.
But, we still have to pay taxes. When we discount those future taxes to bring
them back to current dollars, at least it drops the real cost in half, down
to $7,500. Unfortunately, once we pay those taxes - in purchasing power terms,
we only have $92,500 left.
Meaning that instead of making $85,000 - we lost $7,500 out of our $100,000
investment in real terms. When we adjust for inflation and look at what a dollar
will buy - our sweet 85% return vanishes, and what we are left with is a 7.5%
loss on our investment.
We just met the "Inflation Tax" - and it ran over us.
Let's review what just happened here. Through its fiscal policies, the government
created inflation that cut the value of our dollars in half. Meaning that everything
that we owned in dollar terms, such as bank accounts and bonds, just had half
the value taken away from us. However, we were smart enough not to put our
$100,000 into a dollar denominated investment. We put it into another type
of asset, an asset that kept up with inflation. We didn't actually make any
real money, we just protected the purchasing power of our assets against the
effects of unwise government policies.
So how does the government react? By stripping us of part of the wealth we
did preserve, on the grounds of illusionary profits. With the illusion that
created the pretext for seizing our assets having been created by the government
in the first place.
Transforming After-Tax Assets To Pre-Tax Income
There is a very important principal that long-term investors of all kinds
are wise to remember: the higher the inflation rate - the greater the percentage
of your assets that belongs to the government. This applies not just to
taxes on ongoing income, but after-tax assets as well.
In the first chart above, we looked at what happened with a 100% rate of inflation.
The nominal value of our asset doubled - and we moved from having 100% of our
$100,000 asset being after-tax, to having $100,000 in pre-tax income (50% of
our asset), and $100,000 in an after-tax asset (50% of our asset). The government
just transformed 50% of our assets from after-tax to pre-tax. Income that the
government is then entitled to tax us upon whenever we trigger a tax effect,
by moving our investment to a different form, or trying to spend part of it.
Income that doesn't economically exist in purchasing power terms, but was artificially
generated through the government destroying the value of the currency.
What the chart below demonstrates is the government's powerful incentive to
increase the inflation rate, if it wants to maximize tax dollars. As shown,
the higher the rate of inflation - the more of your assets becomes pre-tax
income that is subject to taxation.

With the example $3 million portfolio, a 10% rate of inflation raises the
nominal value of our portfolio to $3,300,000, meaning we have incurred $300,000
in pre-tax income - even though the real value of our investments haven't budged.
This means that 9% of our real $3 million in after-tax assets just became taxable
income. The percentage of assets transformed steadily increases with the rate
of inflation, until we reach the bottom row where we see that inflation of
1000% will have the effect of transforming 91% of our assets from after-tax
to pre-tax, as we are now subject to taxation on a full $30 million in illusory
income.
Compounding The Problem - Repeated Raids
There is a particularly unfortunate aspect to the inflation tax - it isn't
a one-time tax. For instance, let's say we own an asset for five years, inflation
turns 50% of our asset from after-tax assets to pre-tax income, we sell the
asset, pay the taxes, buy another asset - and then we start over again. Because
further future inflation will again create another level of pre-tax income,
that will be taxed again. This principle is illustrated in the chart below:

To show how the chart works, let's say you start out with $1 million, inflation
averages an annual 14% over the next 20 years, and through excellent asset
choices you are able to do what most investors are not and earn 14% annually,
so that you keep up with inflation - on a pre-tax basis, anyway. You try your
best to follow a long-term investment strategy that minimizes tax consequences,
but the world is in financial turmoil, and you do need to turn your portfolio
over into new investments an average of once every five years.
For the first five year period, inflation and matching investment success
on your part have raised the value of your portfolio to $1.9 million. The economic
value is still $1 million, but inflation has created $900 thousand in nominal
income, meaning 47% of your portfolio has been converted from after-tax assets
to pre-tax income. You pay a little shy of $200 thousand in capital gains taxes
at a rate of 20% (tax rates are assumed to rise by 5% every five years as the
Boomers increasingly reach retirement age and everyone pays more), and you
are left with $1.7 million in after-tax assets. When adjusted for inflation,
you have about $900,000 of your original $1 million in purchasing power remaining,
and this means the inflation tax has claimed about 10% of your assets.
Then it starts again, as 41% of your after-tax assets are converted to pre-tax
income, you pay a little higher tax rate, and lose a little more than another
10% of your after-tax real net worth. Repeat, and repeat again - and after
4 rounds and 20 years, you have ending assets of $7.8 million, but they are
only worth $570 thousand in purchasing power, and you have lost 43% of the
real value of your starting $1 million in assets to repeated rounds of the
Inflation Tax. Keep in mind as well that these assumptions are relatively benign
in some ways, for a five year turnover is very slow by many standards, and
for simplicity and conservatism we've kept all your income qualifying for capital
gains tax treatment - the bite of the inflation tax is much worse when applied
on an annual basis and at short term tax rates.
Conventional Investments May Fare Much Worse
The worst pain from the inflation tax may be reserved for conventional investors.
Let's illustrate by using the chart below, and making a few simple assumptions.
Let' s assume that the stock market rises by 9% a year, and that a $1 million
investment has increased to $1.5 million in the next five years (call it the
DJIA reaching 20,000). That 50% profit looks great at first glance. Except
the problem is that average annual real inflation levels rose at a 14% annual
rate instead of a 9% annual rate, for total compounded inflation of 90%. So
the real value of the Dow in purchasing power terms has in fact dropped to
10,500, even while the paper value soared. The stock investor has fared significantly
worse than a tangible asset investor who has succeeded in staying even in pre-tax,
real dollar terms.

Now, let's assume that the $1 million in assets had been purchased with after-tax
dollars, so the government had no right to the assets. However, the government
does have rights to the $538 thousand increase in the nominal value of the
assets, even though the real value was falling in purchasing power terms. Again
assuming that capital gains tax rates rise as Boomer retirement finance problems
soar upwards, the investor would pay $107,000 in taxes. That leaves $1.4 million
- but the $1.4 million is only worth $743 thousand in 2007 dollars. So the
combination of government fiscal policy destroying the value of the dollar,
and government tax policy taxing non-existent profits created by the destruction
of the dollar, have taken 26% of the investor's portfolio.
Then it happens again, and again, and again. Until at the end of 20 years,
the Dow now stands at 75,000 (with triumphant newspaper headlines every step
of the way) - and the investor has lost 73% of the value of their assets on
an inflation-adjusted and tax-adjusted basis.
Note that in some ways our assumptions are quite conservative. For instance,
change the trading frequency to once every few months and the tax treatment
to short term rates, and losing only 73% of your investment may begin to sound
quite attractive. Also, we did leave dividends out of the discussion, which
are the stock market's historical method of keeping up with inflation. Which
is appropriate, as the compounded historical dividend rates of 1X to 2X long-term
bond yields that created most of the historical stock market's long-term profits
and resiliency... are long gone.
Solutions: Shelter & Speed
While a detailed discussion is beyond the scope of this article, tax-deferred
accounts such as IRAs, Roth IRAs, and Keoghs, do have some powerful advantages
in dealing with the Inflation Tax. Technical rules and limitations aside, it
may be worth considering the bigger picture as well. When your assets are in
these accounts, your wealth is totally "inside" the government tax system,
where the terms of the withdrawal can only occur on the terms the government
specifies and with the taxes the government says - at the time you are actually
withdrawing the money.
We have the rules as they are set up now. We also have the government's own
chief accountant, Comptroller General David Walker, trying to tell everyone
who will listen that a financial "tsunami" is on the way, and the government
cannot possibly pay for its retirement promises to Boomers. So, the rules -
they will have to change. The retirement accounts will be a very attractive
target for rule changing, simply because there is so much wealth there (if
you need wealth, then wealth is where you go.) The exact form of the changes
is of course currently unknown, but to complacently make long-term investment
plans based on today's rules - when we know there will be overwhelming pressures
to change the rules down the road - may turn out to be a bit too trusting of
politicians.
Another strategy is to try to out-run inflation, by making such good investments
that you leave technicalities like inflation and tax treatments in your dust.
Always worth a try, but if you are investing in dollar-denominated investments,
you might want to be sure you've got your running shoes on and laced up tight.
As covered in the article "Finding Beauty Within The Inflationary Beast" (available
in the archives here), with a 40% tax bracket and ordinary income treatment,
you would have to earn 17% per year just to stay even with 10% inflation and
the inflation tax.
Solutions: Tangible Assets
If Doomsday for the dollar is how the government can pay impossible promises
while still maintaining the status quo - then getting out of dollar-denominated
assets is the obvious and necessary move for many investors. Gold, silver,
commercial property and energy are all possible choices, with advantages for
each category, with the best strategy likely being a diversified contrarian
portfolio.
While the tangible asset investor has some strong inherent advantages relative
to conventional investors caught in the inflation and tax net worth "meat grinder" shown
in Chart IV above, the inflation tax can still be a real problem. For the investor
who is investing in tangible assets specifically because of inflation concerns,
it is incumbent upon them to also have a personal strategy for dealing with
inflation tax issues. This strategy could involve seeking to turn inflation
to your advantage, so that inflation is actually producing real wealth rather
than just preserving wealth, or taking actions to reduce tax exposures to the
inflation tax, or combining the approaches.
Solutions: Turning Problems Into Opportunities
There is an alternative to trying to shelter from inflation, or outrun inflation
- embrace inflation instead. Look inflation straight in the eye and say:
"Inflation, you are likely to play a big role in my personal future, and instead
of ignoring you or thoughtlessly flailing away at you - I will study you and
your ways. I will learn the deeply unfair ways in which you redistribute wealth,
and the counterintuitive lessons about how some investors will be destroyed
by inflation and repeatedly pay taxes for the privilege, even while other investors
are claiming real wealth on a tax-free basis. I will learn to position myself
so that you redistribute wealth to me, and the worse the financial devastation
you wreak - the more my personal real net worth grows. I will examine the official
blindness to inflation within government tax policy that creates the Inflation
Tax, and instead of raging or despairing, I will understand that a blind opponent
is a weak opponent, and I will take advantage of the government's blindness
to create strategies such as the one below:"

Please note that the above is not a replacement for tangible asset strategies,
but an enhancement that can be applied in combination with tangible asset strategies.
This is a theoretical discussion of taxes from an economic perspective,
and is not tax advice for the particulars of your personal situation. For
specific tax advice, you should rely upon the services of a tax professional.
Do you know how to Reverse the Inflation Tax? So that instead of
paying real taxes on illusionary income, you are paying illusionary taxes
on real increases in net worth? The exact, step-by-step specifics of how
to use the government's inflation blindness to get from the problem shown
in Chart I above to the solution shown in Chart V, are within one of the
readings midway through the "Turning Inflation Into Wealth" Mini-Course.
Starting simple, this free course delivers a series of 10-15 minute
readings, with each reading building on the knowledge and information contained
in previous readings. More information on the course is available at MortgageSecretPower.com.
Also available is "Commercial Property Balance Point: Achieve Deep Protection
From Economic Turmoil While Turning Inflation Into Wealth". This 47 page
report is about a powerful optimization technique for turning inflation into
personal wealth and increased safety even while simultaneously weathering
potentially severe economic problems.
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