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eridani

(51,907 posts)
Thu May 16, 2013, 06:30 AM May 2013

Dean Baker: Cutting Social Security and Not Taxing Wall Street [View all]

http://www.nationofchange.org/cutting-social-security-and-not-taxing-wall-street-1368631044

While President Obama is willing to make seniors pay a price for the economic crisis, his administration is unwilling to impose any burdens on Wall Street. Specifically, it has consistently opposed a Wall Street speculation tax: effectively a sales tax on trades of stock and derivatives. The Obama administration has even used its power to try to block efforts by European countries to impose their own taxes on financial speculation.

If the idea of taxing stock trades sounds strange, it shouldn’t. The United States used to impose a tax of 0.04 percent until Wall Street lobbied to eliminate it in the mid-1960s. Many countries, including the United Kingdom, Switzerland, China, and India already impose taxes on stock trades.

The tax in the UK is 0.5 percent on stock trades (0.25 percent for both the buyer and the seller). It dates back more than three centuries. The country raises more than 0.2 percent of GDP ($32 billion in the United States) from the tax each year. The tax has not prevented the London stock exchange from being one of the largest in the world.

There are currently two bills in Congress for a similar tax in the United States. A bill by Minnesota Representative Keith Ellison would impose the same tax as the UK on stock trades and would apply a scaled rate to options, futures, credit default swaps and other derivative instruments. It could raise more than $150 billion annually or more than $2 trillion over the ten year budget window.

A second bill has been put forward by Iowa Senator Tom Harkin and Oregon Representative Peter DeFazio. This bill would apply a 0.03 percent tax to trades of stock and a wide range of other financial assets. According to the Joint Tax Committee, the bill would raise close to $40 billion a year or over $400 billion over a ten-year budget window once it is implemented.
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kr HiPointDem May 2013 #1
Maybe instead of taxing Wall Street Turbineguy May 2013 #2
Once Wall Street has devoured the middle class and poor, they will be in their own economy liberal N proud May 2013 #3
Du rec. Nt xchrom May 2013 #4
not good enough MrYikes May 2013 #5
Why do you assume it would only impact Wall Street? badtoworse May 2013 #6
Unless you are a computer, why would you care? eridani May 2013 #7
I'm a mutual fund investor and the tax would be added onto the fees I pay the fund manager badtoworse May 2013 #8
Ordinary investors won't be paying much. Ordinary people own very little of the stock market eridani May 2013 #9
You haven't broken it out badtoworse May 2013 #10
If the increase were significant, you would need to find a better manager. Egalitarian Thug May 2013 #12
Non-productive? Without investors, we wouldn't have an economy... badtoworse May 2013 #13
Yes, non-productive. Like the barter economy that is used as justification for a number Egalitarian Thug May 2013 #17
Here is the problem mick063 May 2013 #11
My wife and I have had IRA's and 401k's for 30 years badtoworse May 2013 #14
When corporatists own the government mick063 May 2013 #18
You'd be smarter to worry about the banksters grabbing your money eridani May 2013 #19
I'm really confused here. What you wrote is the essence of "I've got mine, fuck you". Egalitarian Thug May 2013 #20
I believe in equal opportunity, not equal outcome badtoworse May 2013 #21
Sales tax Fumesucker May 2013 #15
Agree. Some states even tax the sale of food and/or medicine. byeya May 2013 #16
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