Mexico hops on capital control bandwagon
Posted: October 31st, 2012, 2:30 am
http://dollarvigilante.com/blog/2012/10 ... contr.html
Practical Implications
Because all Notarios will be required to ask and record the source of funds for a purchase, and secure a tax ID number from the seller on any transaction that must be recorded, the days of most large, heretofore legal, cash transactions will soon be ended. Indeed, the days of showing up at a real estate closing with a Zero Halliburton attaché full of cash are a thing of the past.
It has been common in Mexico for buyers and sellers to record an amount on real estate deeds far below the actual amount paid for real estate, resulting in less taxation of that real estate going forward and often avoiding taxation on the capital gains of a real estate sale. Those days may be over, too.
Parting shot
If you stick around anywhere too long, the local elected banditry will come sniffing around with their guns to demand the protection money that the other locals have to pay. But it's not just having to pay the extortion money to the protection racket that annoys me. It's also having to report my financial transactions, or having to file an accounting every few months of the money I've earned—on pain of imprisonment or death. They don't just steal from you, they also want you to help keep their books! It's like making you watch them have sex with the women in your family, and then having to make them a sandwich afterward.

