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EU to twist UK's arm on FTT

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Publié 27 septembre 2011

As the European Commission gets ready to unveil a draft proposal on taxing high-value financial transactions, EU sources are confident they can get the least enthusiastic country, the UK, on board to back the tax.

Next week (5 October), the European Commission will unveil a proposal for a financial transactions tax which will hit a wide variety of trades and financial institutions.

The tax has gained support in the EU from governments and taxpayers who bore the brunt of expensive bank bailouts. But, London, with over half of the EU's financial business, will only back the tax if all financial centres in the world, like Hong Kong, Shanghai, Singapore and New York, are using the same regime.

"Once they see the proposal, I think they will review this supposition," a Commission source said. The source appeared confident that the UK will support the tax because the proposal contains a very wide scope of transactions, actors, rates and uses of revenues.

The draft FTT, obtained by EurActiv, sets a low minimum rate, includes all institutions, except counterparties and central banks, and revenues can be used for both the EU budget and national coffers.

This is, however, still the initial draft which will be subject to scrutiny from the member states, the European Parliament and lobbyists wishing to influence the legislation.

Other EU sources however are adamant that the Commission will have a harder time than it thinks convincing the UK of the tax's merits. "Look at Sweden in the nineties, all of that business just migrated to London," one said, citing a transaction levy that was introduced in Sweden in 1984 and abolished in 1991.

But NGOs say the comparison is unfair. The EU's FTT, like the UK's current tax, the Stamp Duty on shares, will be paid no matter where the trader resides as long as the company is registered in the EU. In Sweden, the tax only affected transactions within their borders.

"Ultimately, the Swedish FTT was badly designed and therefore not very effective. But to say that all FTTs won't work, just because there were flaws in the Swedish FTT, is a bit of a slippery slope argument that doesn’t really work," said Charlotte Gill, Policy and Communications Officer at Stamp Out Poverty.

Though the UK will have to align its stamp duty to the proposal, the Commission source said this should be painless as the EU's proposed minimum rate will be far lower than the duty's current rate at 0.5%.

Previous leaks from the Commission have set the rate at 0.2% and estimated this would raise €30-50 billion annually.

The UK's stamp duty, which predates even the establishment of the EU, still suffers opposition from the country's financial lobby for raising the cost of capital and lowering the value of pensions.

According to a 2009 study by the Oxera consultancy, the Stamp Duty makes equity capital more expensive by up to 12 per cent in some sectors, such as technology.

While the European Commission admits that its FTT will raise the cost of capital and slightly lower GDP, it does not say by how much. "The impact assessment also showed small negative effects on GDP and employment cannot be avoided since they are related to the increase in the cost of capital," the draft states.

Claire Davenport

Réactions : 

Speaking ahead of a two-day summit of EU leaders on 23-24 June, European Commission President José Manuel Barroso said: "Every sector needs to contribute to the economic crisis, none more so than the financial sector."

He added that huge bonuses in the financial sector illustrated that companies were making excessive profits and persisted in taking undue risks.

Microsoft founder Bill Gates on Friday (23 September) backed the  FTT to aid development in poor countries but France acknowledged that most G20 countries did not like the idea.

In a report presented to a meeting of G20 ministers in Washington, the billionaire philanthropist proposed taxing financial transactions, tobacco, and shipping and aviation fuels, according to details of the report.

Commenting on Bill Gates' support of the FTT at the recent G20 talks, a spokesperson for Oxfam, Nicolas Mombrial said: "The FTT ship has sailed, and the richest American man is on board. We're on course for an agreement which stabilises markets and delivers billions to help poor countries fight poverty and climate change. France and Germany are already supporting the FTT but all EU Member States must use their full weight to ensure it is used to help the poor and needy and not to bolster EU coffers."

"Nobody can now say that such a tax on financial transactions is not technically feasible," French Finance Minister François Baroin told a news conference after a G20 meeting on development issues last week. "We are making progress on the technical coherence of this project," he added.

"An EU financial transaction tax would be clearly biased against the UK, which is home to Europe’s largest financial centre, in turn requiring a complex burden-sharing arrangement in order to make it equitable," Open Europe, a conservative British think-tank has argued.

Professor Ross Buckley from the University of New South Wales said: "A financial transactions tax is the tax worth having even if one doesn't need the revenue raised, as it will improve the operations of financial markets by reducing the volume of ultra-short-term computer-generated trading."

Prochaines étapes : 
  • 5 Oct.: European Commission to reveal draft financial transaction tax.

COMMENTS

  • This is how it starts, just a little, then before you know it, we're tied in an stuck. Now, I don't expect that pansy DC to put up much of a fight (and the Chancellor will probably roll over strait away), but if he thinks the people will allow this then he's already lost the next election.

    In the next twelve months the second recession will hit, then we'll really need every penny, not that the coalition will be able to save us with such a useless cabinet, but it'll be then that we finally make a choice to vote in a fully right wing government and get us out of Europe.

    Schultz's appointment is also going to make it easier to get us out of Europe.

    Bring it on, it'll all collapse in 12 months anyway.

    By :
    S. Finlay
    - Posted on :
    27/09/2011
  • Alas, I fear Cameron will cave on thise one, since the lower rate will allow him to pretend otherwise. Of course, a Conservative government worthy of the name would be abolishing Stamp Duty and would thus be in a better position to oppose this power grab.

    Hong Kong and Singapore may not be British anymore but more and more it seems they retain more of their inheritance than the mother country does.

    By :
    Drake
    - Posted on :
    28/09/2011
Contexte : 

A Financial Transaction Tax (FTT) is one of many proposals made to tax banks and hinder market speculation. Many countries have already implemented a levy on banks' assets and liabilities.

The European Commission and the IMF have also examined the possibility of a Financial Activities Tax which levies profits and bonuses.

In a bid to lower national contributions to the EU budget, the Commission proposed to tap into an FTT. The Commission will make a full proposal for the tax next week (5 October). The UK is the staunchest opponent of the tax, arguing that the move will encourage bankers to route their business through tax havens.

The EU's draft tax has been designed to cover the widest possible scope of financial transactions involving stocks, bonds, derivatives, structured products and including over the counter derivatives which currently evade stock exchanges.

It would cover all financial institutions except central counterparties and central banks. Day to day activities like payment services and mortgage lending would also not be included.

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