Governments Eye Private Wealth to Manage Soaring Debt, Says UBS

A UBS report indicates governments worldwide are increasingly likely to mobilize private sector wealth to manage elevated debt levels. The primary tools are expected to be indirect measures like financial repression, which forces investment in government bonds, rather than direct wealth taxes. The report highlights that private wealth is at a record high and significantly outweighs government liabilities, with an $80 trillion intergenerational transfer expected soon. It concludes that capital gains tax hikes are more probable than politically contentious wealth or inheritance taxes.

Key Points: Governments May Tap Private Wealth for Debt: UBS Report

  • Global govt debt projected over 113% of GDP
  • Private wealth at record highs, dwarfs liabilities
  • Over $80 trillion wealth transfer in 20 years
  • Financial repression favored over direct wealth taxes
  • Capital gains taxes more likely than inheritance taxes
2 min read

Governments globally likely to tap private wealth to manage rising debt levels: UBS Report

UBS report warns governments may use financial repression and selective taxes on private wealth to manage rising global debt levels.

"Government debt is almost never repaid... it is the ability to finance debt that matters. - UBS Report"

New Delhi, March 23

Governments across the world are increasingly likely to tap private sector wealth to manage rising debt levels, primarily through indirect measures such as financial repression and selective taxation, according to a report by UBS.

The report noted that government debt levels remain elevated compared to historical standards, with developed economies projected to see debt reach over 113 per cent of GDP in the coming years. However, it emphasised that the ability to finance debt, rather than the absolute level, remains the key concern.

"Government debt is almost never repaid," the report said, adding, "it is the ability to finance debt that matters."

Highlighting the scale of global wealth, UBS said private sector wealth is at record highs and significantly outweighs government liabilities.

"The government-debt-to-personal-wealth ratio is much lower...government debt is dwarfed by the resources available to fund it," the report stated.

The report also highlighted the ongoing intergenerational wealth shift, noting that "over USD 80 trillion of personal wealth" is expected to change hands in the next two decades. It added that "indebted governments will not ignore this".

According to UBS, governments are more likely to rely on financial repression - policies that encourage or compel investment in government bonds - rather than imposing direct wealth taxes.

"Governments are most likely to use repression to encourage or force private investors to buy bonds," it said, adding that this would help lower borrowing costs.

On taxation, the report suggested that capital gains taxes are more likely to be increased due to their relative ease of implementation and clearer valuation. In contrast, inheritance and wealth taxes were described as less effective and more politically contentious.

"Wealth taxes... are economically unappealing for raising revenue," UBS said, citing challenges in valuation, high administrative costs, and potential economic distortions.

The report concluded that while governments will seek to mobilise private wealth, indirect mechanisms such as regulatory measures and lower returns on savings are likely to dominate over direct taxation.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
The report makes sense. Instead of controversial wealth tax, increasing capital gains tax is more practical. Hope Indian govt focuses on widening the tax base and better spending efficiency first, before looking at more ways to tap private wealth. 💰
R
Rohit P
"Government debt is almost never repaid" – this line says it all. We keep working hard, paying taxes, and they keep spending. The intergenerational wealth transfer of $80 trillion is a huge target for them. Time to think about asset protection for our next generation.
S
Sarah B
From an NRI perspective, this is a global trend we need to watch. Many of us invest back home. If India also adopts policies that force investment into government bonds at low rates, it might affect the attractiveness of certain investment avenues.
V
Vikram M
While the report is global, the principle applies here too. The government should focus on boosting economic growth to increase revenue, not just finding new ways to tax or repress savings. A growing economy solves many debt problems. 🚀
K
Kavya N
This is a respectful criticism: The article and report seem to view private wealth as a pool for government to tap. What about government accountability for spending? In India, we need transparency in how existing taxes are used before any talk of new indirect measures.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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