FTT seems to be crumbling before our eyes. How can just a few countries pass it on their own, as that is against the spirit of an EU-wide, or at least euro zone-wide initiative? It's supposed to be a minimum of 9 or more countries in the EU that passes a new tax policy initiative, and FTT may have less than 9 EU or euro zone countries in support.
Let's not lose sight of the role that FTT was destined to play in the bigger-picture events of EU and their bailouts. FTT was chosen as the first EU tax initiative in support of the new EU fiscal compact. The UK objected to the fiscal compact over the FTT proposal and more, putting the EU-fiscal-union drive into neutral and disarray.
The EU leaders including Merkel and Sarkozy want to go back into drive and they need a coordinated new EU-wide tax agreed-to, along with the UK signing a new fiscal compact. Sarkozy probably needs this fast, before his re-election in May.
So, these leaders appear to be floating a trial balloon to downsize their FTT into a UK-style stamp duty tax. Will that be enough to get the UK to sign the fiscal compact, which is France and Germany's main goal? Then they can claim victory on a new EU-wide tax on transactions and a successfully-agreed to EU-wide fiscal compact. Back on their way and with growing influence in Brussels.
But, stamp duty is terrible for traders, who will be snagged with it in most cases, right? So, we need to tell the UK to scrap their stamp duty tax, as they recently considered, and to continue with their no vote on the fiscal compact. There we other issues of financial-market sovereignty too, like EU-wide Brussels-center regulations that the UK objected to. Plus, Sweden probably won't want a stamp duty tax either. All those that said, they would go along if itâs EU-wide may be called on their bluff now and thatâs not good.
We need to call stamp duty a Trojan-Horse for FTT, and a bad idea on its own anyway. And, show all the holes in the stamp duty tax in the UK. Letâs revisit and bring back that content from before.
FTT was a horrible tax, but a real long-shot. Stamp duty may be a little less horrible, but horrible enough for traders, and it may not be as much of a long-shot, so we may be worse off here.
At least we know that Obama and Geithner are against Main Street investors paying a transaction tax and that's the essence of stamp duty.
How can a government charge to stamp traders' shares, when they fly in and out so fast, they can't even stamp them. That's taxation without representation, archaic, and unjustified.