The earlier Bloomberg article (http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-...action-tax-proposal-takes-shape-ftd-says.html) states:
"Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble aims to introduce a German model for such a tax, even though he failed to reach a consensus on such a package among Group of 20 and European Union leaders this year. "
However looking at the FT Deutschland article that Bloomberg refers to (http://www.ftd.de/finanzen/maerkte/...t-schaeubles-0-01-prozentsteuer/50205915.html), as far as I can see it does not make an explicit statement that Germany will go ahead on it's own.
It does say (using Google Translate):
"Schäuble, had instructed its experts to develop a concept for a financial transaction tax. The federal government had neither the G20 summit of major industrialized and emerging countries in Seoul still managed at EU level to get a majority for the tax. But there are certainly assist countries by Germany. In France and the EU Commission is also working on a plan for the tax. Schäuble wants to be able to present a German model, when the chance comes to policy enforcement."
Could this just mean that Germany is going to present their model to other EU countries in the hope that they'll agree (no chance) ?
"Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble aims to introduce a German model for such a tax, even though he failed to reach a consensus on such a package among Group of 20 and European Union leaders this year. "
However looking at the FT Deutschland article that Bloomberg refers to (http://www.ftd.de/finanzen/maerkte/...t-schaeubles-0-01-prozentsteuer/50205915.html), as far as I can see it does not make an explicit statement that Germany will go ahead on it's own.
It does say (using Google Translate):
"Schäuble, had instructed its experts to develop a concept for a financial transaction tax. The federal government had neither the G20 summit of major industrialized and emerging countries in Seoul still managed at EU level to get a majority for the tax. But there are certainly assist countries by Germany. In France and the EU Commission is also working on a plan for the tax. Schäuble wants to be able to present a German model, when the chance comes to policy enforcement."
Could this just mean that Germany is going to present their model to other EU countries in the hope that they'll agree (no chance) ?