Tracking the
rich has become a voyeuristic global industry, a form of celebrity worship. But
it can also provide serious clues about where countries are headed.
When a
country begins to fall into economic and political difficulty, wealthy people
are often the first to ship their money to safer havens abroad. The rich don’t
always emigrate along with their money, but when they do, it is an even more
telling sign of trouble.
Since 2013,
New World Wealth, a research outfit based in South Africa, has been tracking millionaire
migrations by culling property records, visa programs, news media
reports and information from travel agents and others who cater to the wealthy.
In a global population of 15 million people each worth more than $1 million in
net assets, nearly 100,000 changed their country of residence last year.
In most
countries it is fair to assume that any millionaire exodus is composed mainly
of locals, and not foreign investors, because the wealthy classes will be
dominated by citizens or longtime residents. In 2017, the largest exoduses came
out of Turkey (where a stunning 12 percent of the millionaire population
emigrated) and Venezuela. As if on cue, the Turkish lira is now in a free fall.
There were also significant migrations out of India under the tightening grip
of its overzealous tax authorities, and from Britain under the cloud of Brexit.
On the flip
side, slowing outflows can be a welcome sign, and in 2017 the biggest shift for
the better came in that caldron of anti-rich hostility, France.
Equally
surprising was the lack of change in the United States, where the arrival of a
billionaire president did not seem to attract or repel millionaires. A net
total of 9,000 millionaires migrated to the United States last year, but they
represent a drop in the ocean of five million American millionaires.
Just like
the less wealthy, millionaires seemed unsure of America’s direction under an
unpredictable president who offers tax cuts and deregulation for the rich, but
also bashes foreigners and occasionally talks like a pitchfork-waving populist.
Britain and
France appeared to be trading places as magnets for wealth. For decades the
rich had been drawn to Britain by circumspect banks, loose regulations and the
comforts of London. Until 2016, Britain had a sizable influx of millionaires
every year, but the flow suddenly reversed last year with a net exodus of
3,000, amid fears that as Britain exits the European Union, London will fade as
a financial capital. It did not help that in 2017 the government raised taxes
on foreigners who buy property.
France had
long been seen as the anti-Britain, a left-leaning bastion of prying
bureaucrats and high taxes that scared off the wealthy, despite the charms of
Paris. But the growing exodus of millionaires peaked in 2016 with a net outflow
of 12,000, then slowed sharply to just 4,000 last year. The most likely reason:
the May election of Emmanuel Macron, the youngest president in French history,
who promised a lighter-touch bureaucracy less hostile to business and lowered
wealth and capital gains taxes.
Granted,
displaced millionaires get little if any sympathy, but no country gains by
losing the talent and capital of its wealthiest residents, particularly not
emerging countries like India. Stunningly, India in 2017 suffered a net loss of
7,000 members, or 2 percent, of its millionaire population. That exodus came
despite global optimism about India’s growth prospects and matched the flight
from the stagnant and sanction-battered economy of Russia, which also lost 2
percent of its millionaire population.
This unusual
flight from India’s high-growth economy may be driven by the elite’s growing
concerns about an official anticorruption drive and “tax terrorism” — unlimited
authority given to tax officials to target the rich. Under Prime Minister
Narendra Modi, the government has lately begun catering to the nation’s deep
socialist streak, wielding state power to flush out and tax hidden pockets of
wealth.
In the worst
cases, bouts of capital flight can gain momentum until the value of the
currency collapses, plunging the nation into crisis. Balance of payments
records show that 10 of the last 12 major currency crises, dating back to the
Mexican peso meltdown of 1994, began when residents started sending money
abroad, which was typically two years before the currency collapsed. Often
politicians blamed “evil” and “immoral” foreign speculators for these crises,
but it was the locals who first saw trouble coming.
Right now,
this forensic accounting offers clear evidence of looming financial difficulty
in only one major country: Turkey. Starting early last year, affluent Turks
began effectively moving large sums of money out of the country by exchanging
their lira bank deposits for dollars and euros, while foreigners continued to
buy Turkish assets.
The 12
percent decline in Turkey’s millionaire population last year was by far the
largest of any major economy, and second only to the 16 percent decline in
Venezuela, with its small, hyperinflationary economy. Turkey’s millionaires
appear to be fleeing both deteriorating financial conditions marked by very
high inflation, and President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s crackdown on his critics,
including those in business.
Millionaire
migrations can be a positive sign for a nation’s economy. The losses for India,
Russia and Turkey were gains for havens like Canada and Australia, joined
lately by the United Arab Emirates. Owing largely to the stability and glitter
of the most famous emirate, Dubai, the United Arab Emirates in 2017 had a net
inflow of 5,000 millionaires, increasing the size of its affluent population by
6 percent, the largest gain in the world. Britain was among the millionaire
havens until 2016, but may continue losing ground until it can resolve the
uncertainties raised by Brexit.
Savvy locals
are also the first to return when a country’s fortunes begin to turn for the
better. In seven of the last 12 major currency crises, residents started
bringing money back earlier than foreigners.
More
broadly, economists and politicians might rethink the blame they heap on
“immoral” foreigners in periods of capital flight. They assume global money
managers are more sophisticated than provincial locals — but those longtime
residents are in fact quicker to spot and respond to trouble in their own
backyards. They might also assume that residents are more loyal than
foreigners. But the drive to protect one’s assets often trumps patriotism.
Millionaires
move money mainly out of self-interest, to find more rewarding or safer havens.
There aren’t a lot of them, but they can tell us a great deal about what is going
wrong — and right — in a country’s economic and political ecosystems. Leaders
who create the right conditions to keep millionaires home will find that all of
their residents — not just the wealthy ones — are richer for it.
Ruchir
Sharma, author of “The Rise and Fall of Nations: Forces of Change in the
Post-Crisis World,” is the chief global strategist at Morgan Stanley Investment
Management and a contributing opinion writer.
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A version of
this article appears in print on
June 3, 2018
https://www.nytimes.com/column/ruchir-sharma
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