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The
real Goldfinger: the London banker who broke the world
Photograph:
Guardian Design Team
The true story of how the City of London invented offshore
banking – and set the rich free
Fri 7 Sep 2018 01.00 EDTLast
modified on Fri 7 Sep 2018 11.16 EDT
Every January, to coincide with the World
Economic Forum in Davos, Oxfam tells us how much richer the world’s richest
people have got. In 2016, their report showed that the wealthiest 62
individuals owned the same amount as the bottom half of the world’s population.
This year, that number had dropped to 42: three-and-half-dozen people with as
much stuff as three-and-a-half billion.
This yearly ritual has become part of the news
cycle, and the inequality it exposes has ceased to shock us. The very rich
getting very much richer is now part of life, like the procession of the
seasons. But we should be extremely concerned: their increased wealth gives
them ever-greater control of our politics and of our media. Countries that were
once democracies are becoming plutocracies; plutocracies are becoming
oligarchies; oligarchies are becoming kleptocracies.
Things were not always this way. In the years
after the second world war, the trend was in the opposite direction: the poor
were getting richer; we were all getting more equal. To understand how and why
that changed, we need to go back to the dying days of the conflict, to a resort
in New Hampshire, where a group of economists set out to secure humanity’s
future.
This is the story of how their dream failed
and how a London banker’s bright idea broke the world.
In the years after the first world war, money
flowed between countries pretty much however its owners wished, destabilising
currencies and economies in pursuit of profit. Many of the wealthy grew
wealthier even while economies fell apart. The chaos led to the election of
extremist governments in Germany and elsewhere, to competitive devaluations and
beggar-my-neighbour tariffs, to trade wars and, ultimately, to the horrors of
the second world war.
The allies wanted to prevent this ever
happening again. So, at a meeting at the Bretton Woods resort in New Hampshire
in 1944, they negotiated the details of an economic architecture that would –
in perpetuity – stop uncontrolled money flows. This, they hoped, would keep
governments from using trade as a weapon with which to bully neighbours, and
create a stable system that would help secure peace and prosperity.
Under the new system, all currencies would be
pegged to the dollar, which would in turn be pegged to gold. An ounce of gold
cost $35 (that’s about $500/£394 today). In other words, the US Treasury
pledged that, if a foreign government turned up with $35, it could always buy
an ounce of gold. The United States was promising to keep everyone supplied with
enough dollars to fund international trade, as well as to maintain sufficient
gold reserves for those dollars to be inherently valuable.
To prevent speculators trying to attack these
fixed currencies, cross-border money flows were severely constrained. Money
could move overseas, but only in the form of long-term investments, not to
speculate short term against currencies or bonds.
To understand how this system worked, imagine
an oil tanker. If it has just one huge tank, then the oil can slosh backwards
and forwards in ever greater waves, until it destabilises the vessel, which
overturns and sinks. At the Bretton Woods conference, the oil was divided
between smaller tanks, one for each country. The liquid could slosh back and
forth within its little compartments, but would be unable to achieve enough
momentum to damage the integrity of the vessel.
Strangely, one of the best evocations of this
long-gone system is Goldfinger, the James Bond book. The film of the same name
has a slightly different plot, but they both feature an attempt to undermine
the west’s financial system by interfering with its gold reserves. “Gold and
currencies backed by gold are the foundations of our international credit,” a
Bank of England official named Colonel Smithers explains to 007.
The trouble is, the colonel continues, that the Bank is only
prepared to pay £1,000 for a gold bar, which is the equivalent of the $35 per
ounce price paid in America, whereas the same gold is worth 70% more in India,
where there is a high demand for gold jewellery. It is thus highly profitable
to smuggle gold out of the country and sell it overseas.
The villain Auric Goldfinger’s cunning scheme
is to own pawnbrokers all over Britain, buy up gold jewellery and trinkets from
ordinary Brits in need of a bit of cash, then melt them down into plates,
attach the plates to his Rolls-Royce, drive them to Switzerland, reprocess them
and fly them to India. By doing so, Goldfinger will not only undermine the
British currency and economy, but also earn profits he could use to fund
communists and other miscreants. Hundreds of Bank of England employees are
engaged in trying to stop this kind of scam from happening, Smithers tells 007,
but Goldfinger is too clever for them. He has secretly become Britain’s richest
man, and has £5m-worth of gold bars sitting in the vaults of a bank in the
Bahamas.
“We are asking you to bring Mr Goldfinger to
book, Mr Bond, and get that gold back,” says Smithers. “You know about the
currency crisis and the high Bank rate? Of course. Well, England needs that
gold, badly – and the quicker the better.”
By modern standards, Goldfinger wasn’t doing
anything wrong, apart perhaps from dodging some taxes. He was buying up gold at
a price people were prepared to pay for it, then selling it in another market,
where people were prepared to pay more. It was his money. It was his gold. So
what was the problem? He was oiling the wheels of commerce, efficiently
allocating capital where it could best be used, no?
No, because that wasn’t how Bretton Woods
worked. Colonel Smithers considered the gold to belong not only to Goldfinger, but
also to Great Britain. The system didn’t consider the owner of money to be the
only person with a say in what happened to it. According to the carefully
crafted rules, the nations that created and guaranteed the value of money had
rights to that money, too. They restricted the rights of money-owners in the
interests of everybody else. At Bretton Woods, the allies – desperate to avoid
a repeat of the horrors of the inter-war depression and the second world war –
decided that, when it came to international trade, society’s rights trumped
those of money-owners.
All this is hard to imagine for anyone who has
only experienced the world since the 1980s, because the system now is so
different. Money flows ceaselessly between countries, nosing out investment opportunities
in China, Brazil, Russia or wherever. If a currency is overvalued, investors
sense the weakness and gang up on it like sharks around a sickly whale. In
times of global crisis, the money retreats into the safety of gold or US
government bonds. In boom times, it pumps up share prices elsewhere in its
restless quest for a good return. These waves of liquid capital have such power
that they can wash away all but the strongest governments. The prolonged
speculative attacks on the euro, the rouble or the pound, which have been such
a feature of the past few decades, would have been impossible under the Bretton
Woods system, which was specifically designed to stop them happening.
And the system was remarkably successful:
economic growth in most western countries was almost uninterrupted throughout
the 1950s and 1960s, societies became more equal, while governments made
massive improvements in public health and infrastructure. All of this did not
come cheap, however. Taxes had to be high to pay for it, and rich people
struggled to move their money out of the taxman’s reach – thanks to the
separate compartments in the oil tanker. Fans of the Beatles will remember
George Harrison singing on Taxman about the government taking 19 shillings for
every one he could keep; that was an accurate reflection of the amount of his
earnings that was going to the Treasury, a 95% marginal tax rate.
It wasn’t only the Beatles who hated this
system. So did the Rolling Stones, who relocated to France to record Exile on
Main St. And so, too, did Rowland Baring, scion of the Barings bank dynasty,
third earl of Cromer and – between 1961 and 1966 – the governor of the Bank of
England. “Exchange control is an infringement on the rights of the citizen,” he
wrote in a note to the government in 1963. “I therefore regard [it] ethically
as wrong.”
One reason Baring hated the restrictions was
that they were killing the City of London. “It was like driving a powerful car
at 20 miles an hour,” lamented one banker, of his spell in charge of a major
British bank. “The banks were anaesthetised. It was a kind of dream life.” In
those days, bankers arrived at work late, left early and frittered away much of
the time in between having boozy lunches. No one particularly cared, because
there wasn’t much to do anyway.
Today, looking over its glass-and-steel skyline,
it is hard to imagine that the City of London once almost died as a financial
centre. In the 1950s and 1960s, the City played little part in the national
conversation. Yet, although few books about the swinging 60s even mention the
City, something very significant was brewing there – something that would
change the world far more than the Beatles or Mary Quant or David Hockney ever
did, something that would shatter the high-minded strictures of the Bretton
Woods system.
By the time Ian Fleming published Goldfinger
in 1959, there were already some leaks in the compartments of the oil tanker.
The problem was that not all foreign governments trusted the US to honour its
commitment to use the dollar as an impartial international currency; and they
were not unreasonable in doing so, since Washington did not always act as a
fair umpire. In the immediate post-second-world-war years, the US government
had sequestered communist Yugoslavia’s gold reserves. The rattled eastern bloc
countries then made a habit of keeping their dollars in European banks rather
than in New York.
Similarly, when Britain and France attempted
to regain control of the Suez canal in 1956, a disapproving Washington froze
their access to dollars and doomed the venture. These were not the actions of a
neutral arbiter. Britain at the time was staggering from one crisis to another.
In 1957, it raised interest rates and stopped banks using sterling to finance
trade in an attempt to keep the pound strong (this was the “currency crisis and
the high bank rate” that Smithers told Bond about).
City banks, which could no longer use sterling
in the way they were accustomed, began to use dollars instead, and they
obtained those dollars from the Soviet Union, which was keeping them in London
and Paris so as to avoid becoming vulnerable to American pressure. This turned
out to be a profitable thing to do. In the US, there were limits on how much
interest banks could charge on dollar loans – but not so in London.
This market – the bankers called the dollars
“eurodollars” – gave a bit of life to the City of London in the late 1950s, but
not much. The big bond issues were still taking place in New York, a fact which
annoyed many bankers in London. After all, many of the companies borrowing the
money were European, yet it was American banks that were earning the fat
commissions.
One banker in particular was not prepared to
tolerate this: Siegmund Warburg. Warburg was an outsider in the cosy world of
the City. For one thing, he was German. For another, he hadn’t given up on the
idea that a City banker’s job was to hustle for business. In 1962, Warburg
learned from a friend at the World Bank that some $3bn was circulating outside
the US – sloshing around and ready to be put to use. Warburg had been a banker
in Germany in the 1920s and remembered arranging bond deals in foreign
currencies. Why couldn’t his bankers do something similar again?
Up to this point, if a company wanted to
borrow dollars, it would have to do so in New York. Warburg, however, was
pretty confident he knew where he could find a significant chunk of that $3bn –
Switzerland. Since at least the 1920s, the Swiss had been in the business of
hoarding cash and assets on behalf of foreigners who wanted to avoid scrutiny.
By the 1960s, perhaps 5% of all the money in Europe lay under Switzerland’s
steel mattresses.
For the City’s most ambitious financiers, this
was tantalising: there was all this money squirrelled away, doing nothing much,
and it was exactly what they needed in their quest to start selling bonds
again. As Warburg saw it, if he could somehow access the money, package it up
and lend it, he would be in business. Surely, Warburg thought, he could
persuade the people who were paying Swiss bankers to look after their money
that they would rather earn an income from it by buying his bonds? And surely
he could persuade European companies that they would rather borrow this money
from him and avoid paying the steep fees demanded in New York?
It was a great idea, but there was a problem:
the compartments of the oil tanker were in the way. It was impossible for
Warburg to move that money from Switzerland via London to clients who wanted to
borrow it. But he took two of his best men and told them to get it done anyway.
They began their efforts in October 1962, the
same month that the Beatles released Love Me Do. The bankers finalised their
deal on 1 July the following year, the same day that the Fab Four recorded She
Loves You, the song that sparked global Beatlemania. That extraordinary nine
months not only revolutionised pop music, but also geopolitics, since they
included the Cuban missile crisis and John F Kennedy’s Ich bin ein Berliner speech. Under the
circumstances, it is understandable that a simultaneous revolution in global
finance passed little remarked.
Warburg’s new bond issue – these bonds became
known as “eurobonds”, after the example set by eurodollars – was led by Ian
Fraser, a Scottish war hero turned journalist turned banker. He and his
colleague Peter Spira had to find ways to defang the taxes and controls
designed to prevent hot money flowing across borders, and to find ways to pick
and choose different aspects of different countries’ regulations for the
various elements of their creation.
If the bonds had been issued in Britain, there
would have been a 4% tax on them, so Fraser formally issued them at Schiphol
airport in the Netherlands. If the interest were to be paid in Britain, it
would have attracted another tax, so Fraser arranged for it to be paid in
Luxembourg. He managed to persuade the London Stock Exchange to list the bonds,
despite their not being issued or redeemed in Britain, and talked around the
central banks of France, the Netherlands, Sweden, Denmark and Britain, all of
which were rightly concerned about the eurobonds’ impact on currency controls.
The final trick was to pretend that the borrower was Autostrade – the Italian
state motorway company – when really it was IRI, a state holding company. If
IRI had been the borrower, it would have had to deduct tax at source, while
Autostrade did not have to.
The cumulative effect of this game of
jurisdictional Twister was that Fraser created a bond paying a good rate of
interest, on which no one had to pay tax of any kind, and which could be turned
back into cash anywhere. These were what are known as bearer bonds. Whoever
possessed the bond owned them; there was no register of ownership or any
obligation to record your holding, which was not written down anywhere.
Fraser’s eurobonds were like magic. Before
eurobonds, hidden wealth in Switzerland couldn’t really do much; but now it
could buy these fantastic pieces of paper, which could be carried anywhere,
redeemed anywhere and all the while paid interest to their owners, tax free.
Dodge taxes and make a profit, worldwide.
So, who was buying Fraser’s magical invention?
Who was providing the money he was lending to IRI, via Autostrade? “The main
buyers of these bonds were individuals, usually from eastern Europe but often
also from Latin America, who wanted to have part of their fortune in mobile
form so that if they had to leave they could leave quickly with their bonds in
a small suitcase,” Fraser wrote in his autobiography. “There was still a mass
migration of the surviving Jewish populations of central Europe heading for
Israel and the west. To this was added the normal migration of fallen South
American dictators heading east. Switzerland was where all this money was
stashed away.”
Later, historians tried to downplay Fraser’s
account a little, and to claim that corrupt politicians – those fallen South
American dictators – made up just a fifth or so of the demand for these early
bond issues. As for the remaining four-fifths of the money that bought up the
bonds, this came from standard tax dodgers – “Belgian dentists”, the bankers
called them – high-earning professionals who steered a chunk of their earnings
to Luxembourg or Geneva, and who welcomed this lovely new investment.
The eurobonds set wealth free and were the
first step towards creating the virtual country of the rich that I call
Moneyland. Moneyland includes offshore finance, but is much broader than that,
since it protects every aspect of a rich person’s life from scrutiny, not just
their money. The same money-making dynamic that enticed Fraser to defang
capital controls on behalf of his clients, entices his modern-day counterparts
to find ways for the world’s richest people to avoid visa controls,
journalistic scrutiny, legal liability and much more. Moneyland is a place
where, if you are rich enough, whoever you are, wherever your money comes from,
the laws do not apply to you.
This is the dirty secret at the heart of the
City’s rebirth, the beginning of the process that eventually led to today’s
stratospheric inequality. It was all made possible by modern communications –
the telegram, the phone, the telex, the fax, the email – and it allowed the
world’s richest people to avoid the responsibilities of citizenship
That first deal was for $15m. But once the way
to sidestep the obstacles that stopped cash flowing offshore had been
identified, there was nothing to stop more money following behind. In the
second half of 1963, $35m of eurobonds were sold. In 1964, the market was
$510m. In 1967, the total passed $1bn for the first time, and it is now one of
the biggest markets in the world.
The result was that, over time, the system
created at Bretton Woods fell apart. More and more dollars were escaping
offshore, where they avoided the regulations and taxes imposed upon them by the
US government. But they were still dollars, and thus 35 of them were still
worth an ounce of gold.
The trouble that followed stemmed from the
fact that dollars don’t just sit around doing nothing. They multiply. If you
put a dollar in a bank, the bank uses it as security for the money it lends to
someone else, meaning there are more dollars – your dollar, and the dollars
someone else has borrowed. And if that person puts the money in another bank,
and that bank lends it, there are now even more dollars, and so on.
And since every one of those dollars was
nominally worth a fixed amount of gold, the US would have needed to keep buying
ever more gold to satisfy the potential demand. If the US did that, however, it
would have to have bought that gold with dollars, meaning yet more dollars
would exist, which would multiply in turn, meaning more gold purchases, and
more dollars, until the system would eventually collapse under the weight of
the fact that it didn’t make sense; it couldn’t cope with offshore.
The US government tried to defend the
dollar/gold price, but every restriction it put on dollar movements just made
it more profitable to keep your dollars in London, leading more money to leak
offshore, and thus more pressure to build on the dollar/gold price. And where
the dollars went, the bankers followed. The City had looser regulations and
more accommodating politicians than Wall Street, and the banks loved it. In
1964, 11 US banks had branches in the City of London. In 1975, 58 did.
The US Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency, who administered the federal banking system, opened a permanent
office in London to inspect what the British branches of American banks were up
to. But the Americans had no power in the UK and got no help from the locals.
“It doesn’t matter to me,” said Jim Keogh, the Bank of England official
responsible for monitoring these banks, “whether Citibank is evading American
regulations in London”.
By that time, however, Washington had bowed to
the inevitable and stopped promising to redeem dollars for gold at $35 an
ounce. It was the first step in a steady dismantling of all the safeguards
created at Bretton Woods. The philosophical question over who really owned
money – the person who earned it, or the country that created it – had been answered.
If you had money, thanks to the accommodating
bankers of London and Switzerland, you could now do what you wanted with it and
governments could not stop you. As long as one country tolerated offshore, as
Britain did, then the efforts of all the others came to nothing. If regulations
stop at a country’s borders, but the money can flow wherever it wishes, its
owners can outwit any regulators they choose.
The developments that began with Warburg did
not stop with simple eurobonds. The basic pattern was endlessly replicable.
Identify a line of business that might make you and your clients money. Look
around the world for a jurisdiction with the right rules for that business –
Liechtenstein, the Cook Islands, Jersey – and use it as a nominal base.
If you couldn’t find a jurisdiction with the
right kind of rules, then you threatened or flattered one until it changed its
rules to accommodate you. Warburg himself started this off, by explaining to
the Bank of England that if Britain did not make its rules competitive and its
taxes lower, then he would take his bank elsewhere, perhaps to Luxembourg.
Hey presto, the rules were changed, and the
tax – in this case, stamp duty on bearer bonds – was abolished. The world’s
response to these developments has been entirely predictable as well. Time
after time, countries have chased after the business they have lost offshore
(as the US did by abolishing the regulations the banks were dodging when they
moved to London), thus making the onshore world ever more similar to the
offshore piratical world that Warburg’s bankers created.
Taxes have fallen, regulations have relaxed,
politicians have become friendlier, all in an effort to entice the restless
money to settle in one jurisdiction rather than another. The reason for this is
simple. Once one jurisdiction lets you do what you want, the business flows
there and other jurisdictions have to rush to change, too. It is the Moneyland
ratchet, always loosening regulations for the benefit of those with money to
move around, and never tightening them.
Different nations are affected by Moneyland in
different ways. Wealthy citizens of the rich countries of Europe and North
America own the largest total amount of cash offshore, but it is a relatively
small proportion of their national wealth, thanks to the large size of their
economies. The economist Gabriel Zucman estimates it to be just 4% for the US.
For Russia, however, 52% of household wealth is offshore, outside the reach of
the government. In the Gulf countries, it is an astonishing 57%.
“It’s very easy for oligarchs of developing
countries, non-democratic countries, to hide their wealth. That provides them
with huge incentives to loot their countries, and there’s no oversight,” says
Zucman.
Come January, we will get another update of
how much more of the world’s wealth these oligarchs have taken for themselves:
the only surprise will be the precise volume of their new acquisition, and how
little they have left for the rest of us. But we shouldn’t wait until then to
grasp the urgency of the situation.
We need to act now to shine a light on their
wealth, on the dark matter whose gravitational power is bending the fabric of
our societies. We may have been ignoring Moneyland, but its nomad citizens have
not been ignoring us. If we wish to take back control of our economies, and our
democracies, we need to act now. Every day that we wait, more money is stacked
against us.
Adapted
from Moneyland: Why Thieves & Crooks Now Rule The World
& How to Take It Back by Oliver Bullough, published by
Profile Books
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