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

Quote from JamesL:

You think maybe using a different graphic on that site, like a guy wearing a barrel, for the dual meaning - naked AND broke

Image of a naked and broke guy could also provide popular "gender balance". The link to this site is going to find its way into to every level of government, news rooms, average income domestic residences, professional organisations. It will be quoted in communications to political advisors.

This informative site can appeal to every demographic. The alternative "information" site is deliberately misinterpreting declining political interest in ftt and its monopoly will soon be over.
 
This is not directly related to the FTT, but is still encouraging to note, as these OWS stooges advocate for the FTT.


http://www.rasmussenreports.com/pub...esent_views_of_mainstream_america_44_disagree



36% Say Wall Street Protesters Represent Views Of Mainstream America, 44% Disagree.

Voters tend to view the Occupy Wall Street protesters negatively and regard their views as liberal and out of step with mainstream America. They’re almost evenly divided over whether the protesters genuinely want to change the system or just want a bailout of their own.

Thirty-three percent (33%) of Likely U.S. Voters hold a favorable view of the protesters, while 43% regard them unfavorably, according to the latest Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey. Twenty-four percent (24%) are undecided.
 
Quote from TomDavis:

Following is information I've collected. Use any way you like. Also sent via your website. Hope you got it.

..............................

The Swedish experience (1984-1991) with the FTT resulted in lower GDP and increased unemployment. Most of the tax fell on retail investors and very little on financial institutions (many of whom either went out of business or left the country). Only 3% of the projected FTT revenues ever materialized (a source of considerable embarrassment) and the tax was a net loss to the Swedish Treasury. The FTT was repealed in 1991 after it destroyed much of Sweden’s financial industry. On September 16, 2011, Anders Borg, the Swedish Finance Minister, said: “We have substantial experience in Sweden...And from the Swedish perspective, we cannot foresee that we would introduce such a tax in our system again."

..................................

The FTT has been studied extensively in the US, Canada and Australia where the tax has been rejected because it’s projected to contract GDP, increase unemployment and place most of the burden on retail investors rather than financial institutions. Most recently, the EU Commission's official 1200 page “Impact Assessment Report” for the FTT says the following:
1. The FTT will cause EU GDP to contract, yielding an annual negative 1.8 percent GDP (or an annual GDP loss of 221 billion Euros)
2. Result in a loss of 500,000 EU jobs
3. Result in a loss of 110 billion Euros in income, VAT and business tax revenues (from the contracting economy and lost jobs)
4. Raise 57B Euros in Financial Transaction Taxes while LOSING 110B Euros in income, VAT and business taxes -- resulting in a NET LOSS of 53B Euros each year
5. Most of the net economic burden falls on individuals (from job losses) and non-financial businesses (from economic contraction)

..................................

The United States Treasury Department studied the FTT and concluded that most of the tax falls on retail investors and very little on financial institutions. Lael Brainard, Treasury Department Undersecretary for International Affairs, recently said: “We're very much in sync with Europe on their goal of ensuring that large financial institutions bear their fair share of the burden, but the US-proposed 'responsibility fee' would better deter the kind of risky behavior that led to the crisis as well as ensure that large financial institutions and not retail investors bear the burden."

………………………………………

Supporters of the FTT often tout the success of the UK “stamp tax,” but fail to disclose that most banks and investment firms do not pay the tax. Over 70% of all London Exchange transactions pay no stamp tax, and 100% of all other transactions (e.g., trades on the CME or NYSE) are also exempt. Of all the transactions that originate in the UK, fewer than 3% are subject to the stamp tax. If all transactions were taxable, financial firms would exit London in droves. ICAP, with over 2000 employees in London, recently announced that they will leave the city if the FTT is implemented in the UK. Scores of other financial services firms will follow right on their heels. If these firms relocate, London would lose billions in economic activity, billions more in income taxes and capital gains taxes, and 30,000-50,000 jobs.

……………………………………..
Current state of the Financial Transaction Tax (FTT):
1. EUROPE
The European Union's "Impact Assessment Report" of the proposed EU FTT showed that it would reduce EU GDP, cost hundreds of thousands of jobs and would actually decrease total tax revenue collections because taxes lost from the contracting economy and decreased employment would be greater than the FTT taxes collected. The Czech Finance Minister called the tax "economically irrational." The Swedish Finance Minister rejected the tax and said that Sweden would not participate. The UK, Ireland and Malta have also stated their intentions to oppose the FTT.


2. THE UNITED STATES
(a) The Obama administration came out against the FTT saying that treasury department studies showed that most of the cost would be borne by retail investors and not financial institutions. The Obama administration is proposing a tax that imposes fees directly on financial institutions based upon how much risk each bank puts into the financial system. Lael Brainard, Treasury Department Undersecretary for International Affairs, recently said: “We're very much in sync with Europe on their goal of ensuring that large financial institutions bear their fair share of the burden, but the US-proposed 'responsibility fee' would better deter the kind of risky behavior that led to the crisis as well as ensure that large financial institutions and not retail investors bear the burden."

(b) Peter Defazio recently introduced FTT legislation in the House of Representatives. However, it was only able to attract 12 co-sponsors and is unlikely to get out of committee for a vote in the Republican-controlled House. Tom Harkin introduced similar legislation in the Senate, but with Democratic stalwarts Dick Durbin and Charles Schumer likely to support the Obama plan, Harkin’s legislation will have difficulty gaining traction in the Senate.


3. THE WORLD (G20)
Eleven of the G20 nations have said “no” to the FTT. These countries include: the US, Canada, Mexico, the UK, Australia, China, India, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Indonesia and South Korea. In addition, Argentina and Brazil said they will only support the FTT if it’s world-wide, including Switzerland, Hong Kong and Singapore, all of whom have said they will not introduce any new transaction fees or taxes into their financial system. Japan and Italy have expressed reservations and are unwilling to commit to the FTT at this time. Among the G20 members, only Germany, France, Turkey and South Africa unconditionally support of the FTT.











NICE SUMMARY
 
<b>Re: Improving Google Search Rank for www.financialtransactiontaxes.com</b>

I read once that Google Search ranks a site higher if visitors spend a long time on the site when they visit.

So my suggestion is that ALL OF US visit the site each day and keep it open in a browser tab for several hours each day. If each trader opens it up at the start of the day we will quickly send tortoise's site to the top of the rankings and replace the Robin Hood pages...

Let's make it a goal to get to the #1 spot when someone searches for "financial transaction tax"...

We should also contact economics (anti-tax) and trading sites (brokers, exchanges) and get them to link to the site. I already emailed the Tax Payers Alliance so hopefully they will backlink.

In this respect, perhaps someone could create a small logo that is identifiable with our campaign against FTT. Maybe we could sell some t shirts later on and contribute the proceeds towards the charities that don't support FTT! :)

Suggestions for a logo?
1) Something similar to the ghostbusters logo (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Ghostbusters_logo.svg) but with Robin Hood inside (instead of a ghost).
2) Utilize a symbol of freedom (nice and positive)
eg. http://www.glasswings.com.au/essays/symbol.html
Many possibilities of course.
 
There is plenty of positive news in this Austrian article on this morning's Ecofin meeting:

http://derstandard.at/1319182279285/Land-gegen-Land-EU-Finanztransaktionssteuer-spaltet-Eurozone

(google translation):
[...]Urged at the meeting of EU finance ministers, especially Germany to introduce, if necessary even by the euro zone. Which included Finland, Slovenia, France, Belgium, Greece, Spain and Austria. However, expressed concerns Luxembourg, Cyprus, Malta, Italy, Ireland, Slovakia and the The Netherlands. Had not spoken out at the first so-called policy debate on a proposal from the EU Commission to impose a tax on financial transactions of the Euro zone Portugal and Estonia. Were from the ten non-euro countries there Skepticism until clear rejection - especially from Sweden, Great Britain and the Czech Republic. Even Denmark, Latvia, Bulgaria and Romania withdrew it, only to endorse a global tax[..]
 
If the Austrian article is correct in it's numbers, then it may not be possible for any enhanced cooperation agreement to take place as had been feared before.

From wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enhanced_co-operation) the mechanism needs a minimum of one third of Member States (nine of the twenty-seven in 2010), who file a request with the European Commission. If the Commission accepts it then it has to be approved by a qualified majority of all member states to proceed.

From the article there only seem to be 8 definite members and possibly 14 or more out of the 27 are opposed.
 
Quote from Explorer:

There is plenty of positive news in this Austrian article on this morning's Ecofin meeting:

http://derstandard.at/1319182279285/Land-gegen-Land-EU-Finanztransaktionssteuer-spaltet-Eurozone

(google translation):
[...]Urged at the meeting of EU finance ministers, especially Germany to introduce, if necessary even by the euro zone. Which included Finland, Slovenia, France, Belgium, Greece, Spain and Austria. However, expressed concerns Luxembourg, Cyprus, Malta, Italy, Ireland, Slovakia and the The Netherlands. Had not spoken out at the first so-called policy debate on a proposal from the EU Commission to impose a tax on financial transactions of the Euro zone Portugal and Estonia. Were from the ten non-euro countries there Skepticism until clear rejection - especially from Sweden, Great Britain and the Czech Republic. Even Denmark, Latvia, Bulgaria and Romania withdrew it, only to endorse a global tax[..]

it's all politics. some of the countries that have "expressed concerns" according to this article have previously said they are not dead-set against it, but many seem to be holding out until the very last minute to see what can be gained with which opinion. some countries want it, some countries don't, and the overwhelming majority is just stalling for time and could go either way.
 
Quote from benwm:

<b>Re: Improving Google Search Rank for www.financialtransactiontaxes.com</b>

I read once that Google Search ranks a site higher if visitors spend a long time on the site when they visit.

So my suggestion is that ALL OF US visit the site each day and keep it open in a browser tab for several hours each day. If each trader opens it up at the start of the day we will quickly send tortoise's site to the top of the rankings and replace the Robin Hood pages...

Let's make it a goal to get to the #1 spot when someone searches for "financial transaction tax"...

We should also contact economics (anti-tax) and trading sites (brokers, exchanges) and get them to link to the site. I already emailed the Tax Payers Alliance so hopefully they will backlink.

In this respect, perhaps someone could create a small logo that is identifiable with our campaign against FTT. Maybe we could sell some t shirts later on and contribute the proceeds towards the charities that don't support FTT! :)

Suggestions for a logo?
1) Something similar to the ghostbusters logo (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Ghostbusters_logo.svg) but with Robin Hood inside (instead of a ghost).
2) Utilize a symbol of freedom (nice and positive)
eg. http://www.glasswings.com.au/essays/symbol.html
Many possibilities of course.


Excellent ideas, ben. 100% agree

I've now got a complete "stub" site up -- eg, home page, two complete content pages, and a "more to come" page.

My goal is to add an additional page every evening, although it is turning out to be a more considerable time commitment than I imagined. Nevertheless, I'm all in.

In any event, I think we now have a "messaging module" that can and should be shared widely. So, PLEASE, post this link ...

http://www.financialtransactiontaxes.com

... wherever and whenever you can.


A message about tone:

I've received a couple of very thoughtful PMs/emails from individuals who are concerned that the website's tone errs on the side of "smart-ass" in a way that does not befit the seriousness of the subject.

Let me just say that I welcome (indeed, eagerly solicit) all perspectives, and will be making course adjustments, as necessary, on this journey. But there is a very deliberate method behind the (apparent) madness. I'll be happy to discuss my reasoning, via email, with anyone who cares to ask. Just don't want to "tip our hand" on a public message board. Thanks for understanding

And thanks for everyone's support and help. We're in this together
 
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