RE: [N-B] Microstate: A Mouse Roars

2005-01-19 Thread Ian W. Sawyer
Whilst I'd agree with most of this article, what it doesn't mention and
which is something that does give rise to a bit of concern is the way that
the Montenegrin government issued a number banking licences a couple of
years ago, took all their fees but not many months later suddenly changed
the law and withdrew the licences, effectively making those banks illegal. 

If a government can do this, without recourse to any effective appeal, in
one area, it has the potential to do so in others.

 Ian.

http://iansawyer.com
http://iansawyer.ath.cx

The state has grown used to treating its taxpayers as a farmer treats his
cows, keeping them in a field to be milked. Soon however, in cyberspace, the
cows will have wings.. -- The Sovereign Individual





 -Original Message-
 From: R.A. Hettinga [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 Sent: 19 January 2005 15:33
 To: osint@yahoogroups.com; [EMAIL PROTECTED]; 
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: [N-B] Microstate: A Mouse Roars
 
 
 http://online.wsj.com/article_print/0,,SB110608639391629354,00.html
 
 The Wall Street Journal
 
   January 19, 2005
 
  COMMENTARY
 
 
 A Mouse Roars
 
 By VLADIMIR KAVARIC
 January 19, 2005
 
 
 PODGORICA, Serbia and Montenegro -- Since the publication in 
 1776 of An
 Inquiry Into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of the 
 Nations by Adam
 Smith, the impact of free-market activity and international trade on
 economic development is well-known. The experience of recent 
 decades shows
 that the most successful countries with the highest growth 
 rates are those
 that have implemented pro-market policies and allow freedom 
 in economic
 affairs. That's why a transition economy like Montenegro sees its best
 chance in openness, private initiative, international competition, and
 economic freedom.
 
 Montenegro, the smallest state of the former Yugoslavia with 
 little more
 than 600,000 inhabitants, presents its economic development 
 concept with
 the slogan Montenegro -- Microstate. Microstate in this 
 case has nothing
 to do with the size of the population or the country. Rather, the
 Montenegrin Microstate concept, developed by Professor 
 Veselin Vukotic,
 assumes a minimal role for the state in the economy, low taxes, simple
 business regulations, a stable institutional framework, and 
 the protection
 of property rights.
 
 The first steps on this road have already been taken. 
 Montenegro adopted
 the euro as the country's legal tender and thereby minimized 
 the inflation
 taxation of its citizens. Without that step, the central bank in
 Montenegro, a transitional economy with weak institutions, 
 would have been
 under constant pressure to print money.
 
 The adoption of the new tax law will introduce one of the 
 lowest corporate
 tax rates in Europe: a mere 9%. Capital-exchange restrictions 
 have been
 eliminated and the repatriation of profits made by foreign 
 investors in
 Montenegro is free. Interest rates are market determined and 
 more than 99%
 of the prices are freely set. Treating foreign investors just 
 like domestic
 ones, enjoying the same rights and legal protections, is intrinsic to
 Montenegro's privatization, investment and business 
 regulations. In order
 to encourage new business development, the required starting 
 capital for a
 limited liability company has been reduced to ¤1. The 
 aluminum industry,
 which accounts for 60% of total exports, is in the process of being
 privatized. The tender for Telekom Crna Gore, the national fixed-line
 operator, is also already underway. Tourism is another area where
 Montenegro has enormous potential to expand. A majority of 
 hotels are still
 state-owned but those are now all up for sale while the 
 country is open for
 new investments. According to the World Tourism Organization, 
 Montenegro's
 tourism industry will be one of the fastest growing in the world.
 
 The biggest obstacles to economic freedom at the moment are 
 high government
 expenditures and the large number of administrative barriers. 
 A reform of
 the judicial system would also significantly improve the 
 business ambience.
 These barriers are, for the most part, part of the old 
 socialist legacy.
 
 As anywhere else in the world, the most vigorous objections to the
 implementation of economic freedom in Montenegro come from 
 rent-seeking
 groups, monopolists, and people that benefit from state 
 redistribution.
 
 But Montenegro also has to overcome a barrier that is peculiar to its
 political situation. As one of the basic preconditions for signing the
 Association and Stabilization Agreement with the EU, Brussels 
 insisted on
 the harmonization of economic systems between Serbia and Montenegro.
 Given the fact that Montenegro wants to develop an open and
 service-oriented economy while Serbia wants to protect its 
 agriculture and
 inherited heavy industries, the harmonization of these 
 systems is more than
 just problematic. The most illustrative 

RE: [N-B] Microstate: A Mouse Roars

2005-01-19 Thread Ian W. Sawyer
Whilst I'd agree with most of this article, what it doesn't mention and
which is something that does give rise to a bit of concern is the way that
the Montenegrin government issued a number banking licences a couple of
years ago, took all their fees but not many months later suddenly changed
the law and withdrew the licences, effectively making those banks illegal. 

If a government can do this, without recourse to any effective appeal, in
one area, it has the potential to do so in others.

 Ian.

http://iansawyer.com
http://iansawyer.ath.cx

The state has grown used to treating its taxpayers as a farmer treats his
cows, keeping them in a field to be milked. Soon however, in cyberspace, the
cows will have wings.. -- The Sovereign Individual

~



 -Original Message-
 From: R.A. Hettinga [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 Sent: 19 January 2005 15:33
 To: osint@yahoogroups.com; [EMAIL PROTECTED]; 
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: [N-B] Microstate: A Mouse Roars
 
 
 http://online.wsj.com/article_print/0,,SB110608639391629354,00.html
 
 The Wall Street Journal
 
   January 19, 2005
 
  COMMENTARY
 
 
 A Mouse Roars
 
 By VLADIMIR KAVARIC
 January 19, 2005
 
 
 PODGORICA, Serbia and Montenegro -- Since the publication in 
 1776 of An
 Inquiry Into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of the 
 Nations by Adam
 Smith, the impact of free-market activity and international trade on
 economic development is well-known. The experience of recent 
 decades shows
 that the most successful countries with the highest growth 
 rates are those
 that have implemented pro-market policies and allow freedom 
 in economic
 affairs. That's why a transition economy like Montenegro sees its best
 chance in openness, private initiative, international competition, and
 economic freedom.
 
 Montenegro, the smallest state of the former Yugoslavia with 
 little more
 than 600,000 inhabitants, presents its economic development 
 concept with
 the slogan Montenegro -- Microstate. Microstate in this 
 case has nothing
 to do with the size of the population or the country. Rather, the
 Montenegrin Microstate concept, developed by Professor 
 Veselin Vukotic,
 assumes a minimal role for the state in the economy, low taxes, simple
 business regulations, a stable institutional framework, and 
 the protection
 of property rights.
 
 The first steps on this road have already been taken. 
 Montenegro adopted
 the euro as the country's legal tender and thereby minimized 
 the inflation
 taxation of its citizens. Without that step, the central bank in
 Montenegro, a transitional economy with weak institutions, 
 would have been
 under constant pressure to print money.
 
 The adoption of the new tax law will introduce one of the 
 lowest corporate
 tax rates in Europe: a mere 9%. Capital-exchange restrictions 
 have been
 eliminated and the repatriation of profits made by foreign 
 investors in
 Montenegro is free. Interest rates are market determined and 
 more than 99%
 of the prices are freely set. Treating foreign investors just 
 like domestic
 ones, enjoying the same rights and legal protections, is intrinsic to
 Montenegro's privatization, investment and business 
 regulations. In order
 to encourage new business development, the required starting 
 capital for a
 limited liability company has been reduced to ¤1. The 
 aluminum industry,
 which accounts for 60% of total exports, is in the process of being
 privatized. The tender for Telekom Crna Gore, the national fixed-line
 operator, is also already underway. Tourism is another area where
 Montenegro has enormous potential to expand. A majority of 
 hotels are still
 state-owned but those are now all up for sale while the 
 country is open for
 new investments. According to the World Tourism Organization, 
 Montenegro's
 tourism industry will be one of the fastest growing in the world.
 
 The biggest obstacles to economic freedom at the moment are 
 high government
 expenditures and the large number of administrative barriers. 
 A reform of
 the judicial system would also significantly improve the 
 business ambience.
 These barriers are, for the most part, part of the old 
 socialist legacy.
 
 As anywhere else in the world, the most vigorous objections to the
 implementation of economic freedom in Montenegro come from 
 rent-seeking
 groups, monopolists, and people that benefit from state 
 redistribution.
 
 But Montenegro also has to overcome a barrier that is peculiar to its
 political situation. As one of the basic preconditions for signing the
 Association and Stabilization Agreement with the EU, Brussels 
 insisted on
 the harmonization of economic systems between Serbia and Montenegro.
 Given the fact that Montenegro wants to develop an open and
 service-oriented economy while Serbia wants to protect its 
 agriculture and
 inherited heavy industries, the harmonization of these 
 systems is more than
 just problematic. The most illustrative