Showing posts with label European Union. Show all posts
Showing posts with label European Union. Show all posts

Saturday, March 16, 2013

EU unveils revised 'Robin Hood' tax

EU unveils revised 'Robin Hood' tax
Published on Feb 14, 2013


Credit: http://www.euronews.com/

The European Commission on Thursday unveiled a new proposal for a tax on financial transactions that could be collected worldwide.

Only 11 EU nations want to take part, but they need to strike a deal together before the levy can become a reality.

Those countries are Germany; France; Austria; Belgium; Estonia; Greece; Italy; Portugal; Spain; Slovakia; and Slovenia.

Algirdas Semeta, EU Commissioner for Taxation said he was "quite optimistic that (those) member states will be able to reach an agreement relatively quickly."

The 11 countries that say they want to adopt the so-called FTT account for two-thirds of EU growth.

The European Commission says the tax on share, bond and derivative trades will raise up to 35 billion euros a year.

Yet its own study on the now-defunct pan-EU proposal found it would reduce economic growth.

Investors, meanwhile, argue that the costs will be passed on to savers.

James Watson, BusinessEurope chief economist, told euronews: "If you've got a pension fund and that pension is investing in companies as most fund pensions do, than in the long term you as a pensioner are going to be paying this tax".

ATTAC, a lobby group in favour of the so-called Robin Hood tax, said any revenues raised should be used for fighting poverty.

"Profits from this levy on financial transactions should be used to help development in the Third World," said Jean Flinker of the organisation's Brussels office.

"We must fight against austerity and find new ways to tax the banks, which continue to make massive profits even in a time of crisis."

Trades outside the FTT zone will not escape the levy.

If a party to the trade is based in one of the 11 nations, then the tax would apply which gives it a potentially global reach.

Non-FTT countries such as the UK are worried this could lead to discriminatory 'double taxation' and hamper the effectiveness of the EU's single market.

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European Union Plans Tax on Financial Transactions

EU Leadership Plans Tax on Financial Transactions, Newsy Business, Oct. 1, 2011

Transcript:

BY: MIKKEL NOEL LANZKY

The European Commission is putting forward plans for a financial transactions tax in an effort to recoup some of the bailouts the EU has given out to fend off the financial crisis and to curb future speculative trading that contributed to the creation of the crisis.

Bloomberg gives us the lowdown.

“The proposal would apply a tax of 0.1 percent on trading of stocks and bonds, with a 0.01 percent rate for derivatives contracts [...] The proposed tax is aimed at banks, investment firms, insurance companies, pension funds, stockbrokers and hedge funds, among other types of financial firms.”

The tax, laid out by Commission President José Manuel Barroso in a speech to the European Parliament could bring in about €55 billion in revenue. According to the Financial Times, Barroso argues EU countries have guaranteed more than 4 trillion Euro to support the banking sector.

“It’s a question of fairness… it is time for the financial sector to make a contribution back to society.”

Left-leaning British newspaper Morning Star quotes former investment banker Sony Kapoor supporting the tax.

“Financial transaction taxes, appropriately designed, can not only raise substantial revenue but also enhance stability by discouraging destabilising trading that serves little economic purpose.”

The European Commission wants the tax to come into effect in 2014, but there are political hurdles. The UK is firmly against taxing financial activity, London’s banking center is the focal point of the global financial markets.

Transcript by Newsy.

Robin Hood Tax on Financial Transactions in United Kingdom Could Raise Hundreds of Billions

The Banker, by the Robin Hood Tax, UK, Feb. 9, 2010

Campaign video by Richard Curtis and Bill Nighy, about the Robin Hood Tax, a tiny tax on bank transactions that could raise hundreds of billions for public services and to tackle poverty and climate change at home and around the world.

RobinHood Global March to Tax Financial Transactions

OCTOBER 29 – #ROBINHOOD GLOBAL MARCH, Adbusters, Oct. 29, 2011

Adbusters, the global network that initiated the idea of Occupy Wall Street and their website OccupyWallStreet.org, has now initiated a new campaign, a global march set for Saturday, October 29, 2011, the eve of the G20 Leaders Summit in France.

Adbusters is proposing “let the people of the world rise up and demand that our G20 leaders immediately impose a 1% #ROBINHOOD tax on all financial transactions and currency trades. Let’s send them a clear message: We want you to slow down some of that $1.3-trillion easy money that’s sloshing around the global casino each day – enough cash to fund every social program and environmental initiative in the world.”

This is a proposal by Adbusters for the general assemblies of the Occupy movement to organize protests in cities throughout the world on Saturday, Oct. 29, 2011.

Bill Gates Drafts Plans for Robin Hood Tax for G20 Meeting in France

Bill Gates backs Robin Hood tax on bank trades, Guardian, UK, 9/22/2011

Microsoft founder to tell G20 to back the tax which could raise $48bn a year for aid and development

Gates was asked by French President Nicolas Sarkozy to come up with draft plans of the proposed financial transaction tax before the G20 meeting in Cannes, Frances on November 3, 2011.

Max Lawson, spokesman for the Robin Hood Tax campaign, said Gates’s backing for a transaction tax meant it was “game on”. He added: “The Germans and French moving ahead to implement the tax. “George Osborne needs to support this tax and show us he is on the side of the poor and the needy, not the banks and the greedy.”

A Small Tax on Wall Street Could be A Big Help to the U.S. Economy

A Small Tax on Wall Street Could be A Big Help to the U.S. Economy, The Christian Science Monitor, Opinion, Oct. 19, 2011

A modestly higher financial transaction tax, or FTT, could discourage speculation, lead to less price volatility, and encourage long-term investment. One estimate projects such a ‘sales tax’ on Wall Street may raise $175 billion a year, even if it cut the total number of transactions in half.

Liberal economist Dean Baker thinks it is a good idea to raise federal revenues to impose a special tax on stock trades and some other Wall Street trading activities.

This tax is referred to as a “financial transaction tax” or FTT a “Tobin tax” as it was first urged by Nobel prize winning James Tobin in 1972.

An FTT bill called “Let Wall Street Pay for the Restoration of Main Street Act” has already been before the Congress of the United States.

Revenues from a FTT could be used to provide useful jobs for the unemployed.

The Occupy Wall Street protests around the country voice a common objection to widespread greed and excess in the financial industry.

The 27 member countries of the European Union are considering their own FTT that would apply to stocks, bonds, and other derivatives. The President of the European Commission says such a tax could raise $74 billion annually.