James48843
Well-known member
It's not a new idea at all. James Tobin first proposed a global transaction tax in the 1970's. The idea has been discussed at the G20 level for some time:
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSN3015550520091130
You already pay a transaction tax today- it's called an SEC fee equal to 0.0033% on every stock sale now.
Here are the countries that already do it:
The UK has long had a securities transactions tax known as a stamp duty on the order of 0.3%. Sweden introduced a 0.50 per cent tax on the purchase and sale of equities in 1984, and kept it until 1991. (Froot and Campbell, studied these two examples in a 1994 book that I edited.) India introduced a securities transactions tax in 2004 and Japan, Korea, Taiwan and Hong Kong did so earlier; in these cases there were not significant reductions in either price volatility or market turnover. Other countries that have had financial turnover taxes of at least 0.10% include Australia, Austria, Finland, Germany, Malaysia, and Singapore. In addition there are other countrires that have smaller trading fees.
Even the United States imposes an SEC fee of .0033%. Thus our virginity is already lost.
That's an extract from a story several months ago over on "Seeking Alpha"--
Here is the rest of that article: http://seekingalpha.com/article/97964-why-not-a-transaction-tax
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSN3015550520091130
You already pay a transaction tax today- it's called an SEC fee equal to 0.0033% on every stock sale now.
Here are the countries that already do it:
The UK has long had a securities transactions tax known as a stamp duty on the order of 0.3%. Sweden introduced a 0.50 per cent tax on the purchase and sale of equities in 1984, and kept it until 1991. (Froot and Campbell, studied these two examples in a 1994 book that I edited.) India introduced a securities transactions tax in 2004 and Japan, Korea, Taiwan and Hong Kong did so earlier; in these cases there were not significant reductions in either price volatility or market turnover. Other countries that have had financial turnover taxes of at least 0.10% include Australia, Austria, Finland, Germany, Malaysia, and Singapore. In addition there are other countrires that have smaller trading fees.
Even the United States imposes an SEC fee of .0033%. Thus our virginity is already lost.
That's an extract from a story several months ago over on "Seeking Alpha"--
Here is the rest of that article: http://seekingalpha.com/article/97964-why-not-a-transaction-tax