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Financial Transactions Taxes: Feasible, Desirable, Powerful David Hillman Director
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Innovative Financing Pathways Voluntary: such as lotteries, Product Red Borrowing/debt-based mechanisms: specialised bonds International Finance Facility for Immunisation (IFFim) GAVI State subsidy: such as Advanced Market Commitments (AMCs) Solidarity levies: micro-taxes on globalised activities such as aviation/maritime transport, finance Example: Air passenger duties UNITAID Pilot project: proof of concept for larger initiative: FTTs
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FTT - characteristics Taxing financial transactions, such as: stocks, bonds, derivatives – trades carried out in volume by finance firms, rather than individuals (tax does not fall on ordinary people) Simple/inexpensive to collect – markets automated, very difficult to avoid – tax deducted at point of settlement Avoiding AVOIDANCE: employ capturing principles such as ‘Ownership’: if you don’t pay the tax, you don’t own what you bought – this makes not paying the tax simply not worth the risk Low rates/substantial revenue: example = 10 European countries progressing now – FTTs on various assets at fractions of 1% (0.01% - 0.1%) – up to 30 billion euro can be raised a year Spending: we propose 50% spent domestically to protect/create jobs; 50% internationally: development/health (25%) + combatting climate change (25%)
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FTT - characteristics Taxing financial transactions, such as: stocks, bonds, derivatives – trades carried out in volume by finance firms, rather than individuals (tax does not fall on ordinary people) Simple/inexpensive to collect – markets automated, very difficult to avoid – tax deducted at point of settlement Avoiding AVOIDANCE: employ capturing principles such as ‘Ownership’: if you don’t pay the tax, you don’t own what you bought – this makes not paying the tax simply not worth the risk Low rates/substantial revenue: example = 10 European countries progressing now – FTTs on various assets at fractions of 1% (0.01% - 0.1%) – up to 30 billion euro can be raised a year Spending: we propose 50% spent domestically to protect/create jobs; 50% internationally: development/health (25%) + combatting climate change (25%)
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Heritage and provenance – Stamp Duty (early version of FTT) pre-dates income tax (1690ies). FTTs appear in John Maynard Keynes (General Theory) + James Tobin (US Nobel prize-winning economist) Not radical but mainstream – many FTTs exist already: more than 40 countries have implemented FTTs in the past decades either permanently or temporarily Examples include: UK raises $4.7 bn. a year from 0.5% tax on share transactions(£3.1 bn.) US raises $1 bn. a year – section 31 fees pays for SEC Brazil raises $10 bn. a year from a variety of FTTs History and practice
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MYTH: it won’t work because all countries need to implement FTTs at the same time, or they will be avoided by moving trading to a country that does not have FTTs – this is a favourite scare-monger tactic of the financial sector REPLY: This flies in the face of the evidence – many, many FTTs (as stated) already exist – they are successful and raise considerable revenue for governments. Every single one has been introduced unilaterally. The key point is ‘design’ – if FTTs are designed properly then companies cannot avoid them by re-locating their financial trading Myth-busting
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1) Transparency – greater taxation of the sector will lead to greater oversight for financial authorities – of great benefit in this current climate of clamping down on tax avoidance 2) Stability – the FTT will ‘throw sand in the wheels’ of financial trading. This will benefit more traditional ‘buy and hold’ strategies of investment and mitigate against the ‘get-rich- quick’ casino approach – particularly reducing the destabilising practice of High Frequency Trading. The FTT is viewed by many economists as good for incentivising long-term investment over short-term 3) Revenue – it is a proven way to raise substantial revenue from a sector that clearly afford it: witness the levels of remuneration/bonus they pay Desirability of FTT - 3 motivations
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Progress European progress – Germany, France, Italy and Spain + 7 other countries are in final stages of negotiations for FTTs on shares and derivatives. ECOFIN last week produced details of deal expected in June 2016. Urgent need for climate finance, ‘additional’ to development finance – new money needed to pay for ‘adaptation’ and ‘mitigation’. This needs to be ‘in addition’ to Official Development Assistance (ODA) or it will effectively lead to a reduction of traditional aid. Predictable and substantial: FTTs can generate substantial, revenue on a predictable basis – France leading on allocation of significant part of their forthcoming FTT revenue to finance to combat climate change Sapin statement
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Modern campaigning work on the FTT to bridge the funding gap to meet Development Goals started with potential of micro-tax on currency transactions Important logic that a business that is by its very nature international – foreign exchange – should be harnessed so that funds can be generated to pay for people’s needs Size of today’s foreign exchange market: $5.3 trillion pd: $5,300,000,000,000 Per year: $1,325,000,000,000,000 Potential
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Critics accuse FTT of being an unworkable, radical idea, when it is the opposite: proven and effective – in fact, mainstream – Bill Gates, for instance, is in favour of it The substantial money it would raise can make an enormous difference protecting livelihoods at home and saving lives abroad – for instance, contributing to the end of AIDS At the end of the day, what’s not to like! Conclusion
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