Is Liechtenstein a Libertarian Utopia?
Prince Hans-Adam II says open borders, low taxes, free trade, and small government should define "the state in the third millennium."

Liechtenstein isn't just one of the world's smallest countries, it's one of the most prosperous.
Despite having only 37,000 citizens and covering just 61 square miles in central Europe, the microstate has a per capita income of about $100,000, a corporate flat tax of 12.5 percent, and an income tax of 1.2 percent.
Now well-known as a banking and financial hub, the principality wasn't always so flush. In fact, in 1967 the royal family had to sell a prized possession—Leonardo da Vinci's first known portrait—just to keep the country afloat.
Reason's Nick Gillespie talked with the country's leader, Prince Hans-Adams II, at the International Students for Liberty Conference in Washington, D.C., about how Liechtenstein turned itself around while becoming world famous for its banking privacy and openness to immigrants. And he talked with Hans-Adams about his new book, The State in the Third Millennium, which outlines the reforms he brought to Liechtenstein and argues that modern government should treat citizens as customers who have the option to live elsewhere.
About 8 minutes. Produced by Joshua Swain.
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Well this certainly seems to be an interesting model for - Binghamton
Binghamton, NY is the most failed place on earth.
Yeah, but their Boscov's is amazing. That particular location is the Department Store That Time Forgot.
Will Boscov's Open In August?
But just think how much banking secrecy, low taxes, openness to 60 immigrants a year, and treating the citizens of Binghamton as if they can actually just up-and-move to, say, Elmira would change things there
Step one: get prince.
Step two: start supplying false teeth to the rest of the world.
I'm thinking of opening the nation of Animalia along similar (but more gun-friendly) lines.
At present the nation of Animalia will consist only of my house, but what the hell - it's a start.
Sounds better than Anvilania
What is Animalia's stance on interventionism? Will they be sending Peacekeepers to the European border nations here in the next few months?
No, both our guys are busy.
Go on...
They're heavily involved in...
....uhm...
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I am not an open borders fan so I don't fault Liechtenstein for having tight controls, but they do in fact have extremely tight immigration controls, granting something like 60 residence permits a year.
When it takes an income of around $200k to live in your country, you can afford open borders. That's a wall not many Mexican migrants are gonna be scaling anytime soon.
Fur Fuerst und Vaterland!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ANOB7SAgzxI
what happened to our favorite place: Somalia?
what happened to our favorite place: Somalia?
Squirrels, man. The squirrels live there now.
As a young student, I often found myself wondering why the Hellenistic city-state method of governance failed. My conclusions were always, "massively unified army nations."
In the coming age, it is going to be almost impossible to move large quantities of people without someone finding out and posting it to the web. My thought is this; why not organize into smaller units of governance? Easier to vote, easier to hold decision makers accountable, more measureable impact upon constituency, more interpersonal relationships, more civic pride.
It would appear that the more homogenous a society (around a factor such as race, region, religion) the more prosperous.
Well, the US is rather prosperous and could not be much less homogenous than it is.
At what scale? The Earth contains all the human heterogeneity in the known universe. The human race as a whole is more prosperous than ever. Still not evidence that diversity=wealth.
Lichtenstein is 5.4% Muslim. That's more than the US.
Isn't the prince friends with Hans Hoppe?
Regardless, breaking the world up into smaller and smaller states is the best option for anything even approximating libertarianism (and it could be beneficial for the far left and right).
Of course, as Kohr wrote: "Will it be done?" "NO!"
He should be if he isn't. They'd get on well. Maybe if I found my own microstate monarchy Hans will be friends with me too. *swoon*
Hans-Hoppe loves Hans-Adams. No homo.
Lichtenstein has a wealth tax (tax on personal and business principle) in addition to taxation on income.
That doesn't sound very libertarian.
Geez! Instead of "Cloudbuster" you should change your handle to "Bubbleburster".
What is said taxation? A .5% wealth tax on all property above 5,000,000 is very different from a 10% wealth tax on all property above 500,000.
It is tiny. Lichtenstein's overall tax burden is pretty low.
Taxing wealth over labor sounds more libertarian to me. Wealth needs the protection of the State.
My private army disagrees with your premise.
Hear hear!
More so, I'm perfectly capable of deciding how I beleive my wealth is best guarded. I don't need men in suits threatening violence to extort my wealth, in the name of my protection and that of my wealth.
Oh the irony.
Neither does having a leader with the word PRINCE in his name.
Ar least it's more honest than 'president.' And 'Prime Minister' is clearly suggestive of a theocracy. Haha.
When your country is the size of a dime it's considerably easier to be so "free," is it not?
There is a lesson in there.
Open borders? lolk
Any idea how much the prince controls versus the other 36,999?
Where is their nuclear submarine fleet? You cannot truly be considered a sovereign state without one.
*Jots down business idea for shared rental of nuclear submarines by small countries.*
You can call it "Unter."
That makes the rented Airforce, Looft!
Time share.
And if its a landlocked country, they will have no way to know you are screwing them over!
The small government works for a small country like Liechtenstein absolutely won't work in a big country like the United States, but the big government that works for a small country like Denmark absolutely will work in a big country like the United States.
Yes! Why all this fawning over the Liechtenstein libertopia when we should be fawning over the Danish welfartopia?!?! Socialism-lite works for highly homogeneous and tiny Denmark so there's no reason it can't work here!
Open borders? The milion Syrian refugees in Germany are all welcome to come on over and settle down?
Yeah, I didn't think so.
Sure, but they don't hand out as much free shit as the Germans, so who would want to refuge there?? Less free shit leads to less problems with immigration (which makes it bizarre that in America the pro-immigration Tribe is the pro free shit Tribe, and the anti-immigration Tribe is the anti free shit Tribe...)
"Open borders" is a stretch from what the article implies to reality. Lichtenstein is fine with anyone coming into their country, for at most three months. After that, if you don't have a rather difficult to procure work permit you're no longer welcome.
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As long as the monarch retains a high degree of political control, it's potential is unlimited. Once a parliament takes the helm, it will still have comparatively more restrained governance out of necessity, but much less so than if the monarch retains ownership of the state and his ability to pass it on through inheritance, so that he remains invested in preserving the capital value of the country.
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It's a nation that doesn't need an army, because it's surrounded by non-libertarian states that have armies, and small enough not to be noticed by any threats, as well as being in the almost exact geographic middle of the mega-bureaucratic European Union. It can afford to be libertarian in a way a lot of nations cannot.
This isn't to denigrate Liechtenstein, just pointing out that it's easy to be a libertarian when you can hand off most of your costs to your non-libertarian neighbors.
Well, in all fairness, the costs you mention are the threat posed by those selfsame non-libertarian neighbors.
A bit misleading, the Income tax is augmented by multiple other income taxes added to the 1.2%, meaning that the maximum income tax is 29% (18% when the income tax plus commune income taxes are added.)
And yes, for a country of 37,000, smaller than 1,000 cities in the United States, with no military, it's easy to be a bit flush with money. But end of the day it is still a Constitutional Monarchy, with the Monarchy having a huge amount of power and control.
This makes me think of how Washington D.C. regularly tops lists? when it's being compared to other states.
The lesson? City-states, by virtue of their size and population density, operate very differently then states.
________
?The focus of any specific list rarely matters.
"Is Liechtenstein a Libertarian Utopia?.....Reason's Nick Gillespie talked with the country's leader, PRINCE Hans-Adams II."
Um...ok, I'll bite.
Let's see how prosperous it would be if it were located next to Mexico
hmmm yes a country with 37000 has open borders with 100k/capita. ok reason.
"The immigration laws in Liechtenstein are on a par with their neighbour Switzerland. The laws are very stringent and non EU nationals may only be considered for work permits with particular specialised, sought after skills, it is otherwise difficult to obtain a work permit. All foreign nationals outside of the EU must have a passport and may require a visa. EU members must either have a passport or a valid EU ID card. People can stay in Liechtenstein for up to three months without a residence permit."
I read that too. Kind of begs the question of being "libertarian." You may shop there, but that is where it ends. Don't think of moving there. Ever. If it were libertarian, I am certain more than 37,000 would have found their way there over the centuries. Stupid article. Especially when you consider Gillespies constant harping about US immigration policy. They are importing rich Germans and Austrians, not poor, uneducated laborers.
But, doesn't that restrict the possibilities for graft?
Its almost as if Reason knows people are looking at the latest presidential polls and then searching for a place to escape to...
...and what about Malta?
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Gillespe and Swain need to fight it out so we can know who's the retard suggesting that they have open borders.
Is Liechtenstein a Libertarian Utopia?
No, it isn't.
Otherwise this tiny country wouldn't have a corporate flat tax of 12.5 percent, and an income tax of 1.2 percent.
It would not have a corporate tax or an income tax at all.
It would only have a sales tax.
It also wouldn't give in to the US IRS demanding if Americans have accounts in their banks
Nice try.
Better luck next time.
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