Brussels, Jan 31 :
Germany, France and nine other euro zone countries will get the go-ahead to
start work on a financial transactions tax, a measure likely to unsettle banks
and trading houses but which will please voters and could raise much-needed
revenue.
European Union finance ministers are expected to give their
approval at a meeting in Brussels, allowing 11 states - Germany, France, Italy,
Spain, Austria, Portugal, Belgium, Estonia, Greece, Slovakia and Slovenia - to
start preparations for imposing a tax on all financial market
transactions.
The levy, based on an idea proposed by U.S. economist James
Tobin more than 40 years ago but largely ignored until now, is symbolically
important in showing that politicians, who have fumbled their way through five
years of financial crisis, are getting to grips with the banks blamed for
causing it.
Some believe that the tax could raise up to 20 billion euros
a year, although estimates vary widely.
"There is sufficient support from
ministers ... and it looks likely they will allow the 11 to go ahead with
enhanced cooperation on a financial transactions tax," said one
diplomat.
Under EU rules, a minimum of nine countries can cooperate on
legislation without all member states using a process called enhanced
cooperation, as long as a weighted majority of the EU's 27 countries give their
permission.
Germany and France decided to push ahead with a smaller group
after efforts to impose a tax across the whole EU and later among just the 17
euro zone states foundered. Sweden, which tried and abandoned its own such tax,
cautioned that the levy would push trading elsewhere.
Critics are also
concerned that the levy could open another rift in Europe, where the 17 states
using the euro are deepening ties in order to underpin the currency, and there
is the growing risk that Britain could even leave the European
Union.
Britain has criticized the tax, and will not adopt it, as trading
in the region's biggest financial center, London, will be affected. If either
the buyer or seller in a trade is based in one of the countries imposing the
tax, the levy can be imposed regardless of where the transaction takes
place.
The tax's proponents, including German Finance Minister Wolfgang
Schaeuble, believe it can tackle activity many deem speculative, such as
high-frequency trading, by imposing a charge on every split-second
deal.
But Nicolas Veron, a financial market expert at Brussels think-tank
Bruegel, said the tax is misguided.
"There are so many things that we
don't understand about the financial system, in much the same way that
17th-century doctors could understand a couple of things about the human body
but not the whole picture," he said.
"Using a tax on financial
transactions to tackle the ills of finance such as high-frequency trading could
turn out to the equivalent to a 17th-century course of leeches."
Some
countries are already counting on the new income, a welcome windfall for
countries where shrinking economies and rising unemployment are sapping other
tax income.
Officials previously estimated that if the scheme were
implemented across all 27 EU countries, it could raise 57 billion euros ($76
billion) a year. Estimates for the amount that could be raised from the 11 euro
zone states vary widely.
As soon as ministers give the 11-nation plan the
go-ahead, the next step is for the European Commission to redraft its plans for
the tax.
It is likely to suggest taxing stock and bond trades at the rate
of 0.1 percent and derivatives trades at 0.01
percent.
Ends
SA/EN
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» EU states to get go-ahead for tax on trading
EU states to get go-ahead for tax on trading
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