1/4% Tax on all stock trades pushed in NY Times today

UN calls for football tax to fund education for poor children

http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2009/dec/02/un-calls-for-football-tax

The proposal echoes growing calls for a Tobin tax on all foreign exchange trades, named after the Nobel prize-winning economist James Tobin, as a way of raising revenue to boost development aid to poor countries.

Kevin Watkins, director of Unesco's upcoming Education for All global monitoring report, said: "The $48m in revenues from the levy is less than many of Europe's top clubs spend on a single footballer. This is a small price to pay for giving half a million children each year the chance for an education that could transform their lives."
 
In economic news, Adam Posen, a member of the Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee, called for taxes such as stamp duties and capital gains to be increased in line with asset price inflation to prevent price bubbles in the future. "If we can contemplate a Tobin tax on financial transactions, we should be able to set up something in similar spirit for real estate transactions which are taxed and regulated," Posen said Tuesday at the MPR Monetary Policy and Markets Conference in London.

http://www.rttnews.com/Content/EuroMarketUpdate.aspx?Node=B3&Id=1144963
 
Democrats Turn Their Attention to Jobs

http://www.cbsnews.com/blogs/2009/12/02/politics/politicalhotsheet/entry5864917.shtml

Here are the proposals to pay for the jobs package:

• Wall Street transaction tax: Rep. Peter DeFazio (D-OR) is leading the effort to make Wall Street bail out Main Street. He's proposed a "securities transaction tax" on stock transactions, futures and credit default swaps. Defazio estimates this would raise $150 billion dollars and could be spent to help create jobs and reduce the deficit.
 
From Toby Sanger--

I was surprised to see the IMF highlighting the potential virtues of a Financial Transactions Tax (FTT) on the front page of its website. The Bloomberg news service earlier had a good story about on the background of this idea, tracing it back to Keynes. This is a proposal that progressive economists and unions have advocated for many years, so it is gratifying to see it get some serious recognition there.

http://www.progressive-economics.ca/2009/12/02/transactions-tax-on-the-front-page/

The important IMF story link is here

http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/survey/so/2009/NEW120109A.htm
 
Arvind Subramanian--Coordinated Capital Controls: A Further Argument In Favor

http://www.piie.com/realtime/?p=1077


Paul Krugman, in a column last month for the New York Times, endorsed a tax on financial transactions, proposed recently by Adair Turner, Britain’s top financial regulator. It is important to distinguish this Turner proposal from the original Tobin tax on international flows and these two taxes in turn from the kind of coordinated capital controls I proposed in this article last month and in this blog post two weeks ago.

Tobin’s original idea was to discourage speculation by taxing flows of international capital. The Turner variant is to tax all financial transactions: domestic and international. What they have in common is that both are seen as structural measures to be applied regardless of the state of the macroeconomic cycle.

In contrast, the capital controls that are now being proposed are more in the spirit of “macroprudential” measures to be taken in response to surges in international capital flows (and not to steady and permanent flows) to emerging markets that have the potential of creating bubbles in asset prices, including exchange rates. Such measures are therefore intended to be taken during the upswing of the cycle and not at all times.

The case for a number of emerging-market countries coordinating such measures under the auspices of the G-20 is to avoid the stigma of being labeled market unfriendly, a stigma that is a consequence of the strong—but misguided—belief system that all foreign capital in all quantities is always good. This is important because the magnitude of the tax that emerging-market countries may need to impose could be substantial in magnitude and not-so-short term in duration.

Read it all.
 
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