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Europe s financial-transactions tax - Bin it

Plans for a transactions tax ought to be dropped

Feb 23rd 2013 |From the print edition

ANY idea that has bankers up in arms and America, of all places, whingeing

about intrusive lawmaking must have something going for it, right? Wrong. The

European Commission s proposals for a financial-transactions tax (FTT),

published on February 14th, are a masterpiece of bad design.

A group of 11 European Union member states, among them France, Germany and

Italy, wants to impose a 0.1% tax on equity and debt transactions, and a 0.01%

charge on derivatives transactions. These countries are pressing ahead on their

own because other EU members, including financial hubs like Britain and

Luxembourg, are opposed.

The notion of a tax on financial transactions is not new. Britain has been

charging stamp duty on equity purchases since 1694. James Tobin, a Nobel

prizewinning economist, proposed a global tax on foreign-exchange transactions

in 1972. The idea of skimming a tiny bit of revenue off the top of financial

trades, and retrieving money for taxpayers from an industry that has benefited

greatly from their largesse, has the ring of natural justice.

The rates proposed sound negligible, but the tax would be imposed at each point

in the transaction chain. A 0.1% rate therefore translates into something much

bigger as securities move from seller to buyer via financial intermediaries.

Even the headline rates are less innocuous than they look. A 0.1% charge on

repo transactions, a way for banks to finance themselves overnight, turns into

a 25% charge over the course of a working year. A 0.01% tax on a derivative

trade sounds small, but is a hefty increase in costs given the large notional

amounts involved up to 18 times more than current costs in the most liquid

markets, according to one calculation.

A Bank of Canada analysis of the effect of previous FTTs found that they tend

to harm market quality, by increasing volatility, reducing volumes and raising

the cost of capital. The early effect of a French equity FTT that was

introduced last summer was to hit trading in the shares of smaller firms.

Without a co-ordinated global approach, the taxes are also likely to be

circumvented by savvier investors, leaving retail investors to pick up the

bill. After Sweden levied an FTT in the 1980s, 60% of trading volume in the

most actively traded share classes moved to London; the tax was repealed in

1991.

Even the commission says that the tax will have a small negative effect on

long-run growth. And its impact could spread far beyond the 11 consenting

countries. To prevent activity fleeing the FTT zone, the commission proposes to

tax transactions on the basis of issuance as well as residency. So buying a

share in Siemens, say, would incur the tax even if the counterparties were two

American firms in Chicago. The proposal is not the only attempt to extend the

laws of one state into the jurisdiction of another. The Dodd-Frank act does so

with derivatives that involve an American counterparty; and foreign financial

institutions are being forced to help Uncle Sam tax American citizens offshore

assets.

Taxation without borders

In a world of mobile capital, it is tempting to legislate beyond borders. That

might just work for America having the world s largest capital markets and its

reserve currency gives you a bit of leverage but is unlikely to for Europe.

These plans threaten to give investors an extra reason not to buy Europe s

securities or transact with its institutions at a time when it can ill afford

to drive away economic activity.

If the FTT-11 want to extract more money from finance, they should drop this

idea and instead impose a levy on their own banks balance-sheets. That would

be more precisely targeted, easier to collect and more respectful of legal

jurisdictions. Unfortunately, the FTT has powerful political appeal, not least

in Germany, where elections loom. Demands by the European Parliament to impose

a cap on bankers bonuses are hard to oppose for the same reason (see article),

even though they would encourage firms to raise fixed pay and increase their

cost base.

Finance needed reform, which is why new rules on capital, liquidity and

derivatives are coming in. They should make the financial system work better.

This proposal will not.

From the print edition: Leaders