Quote from jackpearson:
It's easier with the FTT article showing people will lose 5% of their pensions due to an FTT.
When they realize it hits them and not just the banks, they'll fold.
Don't discount the power of that FT article.
Excellent point. Here are 3 references you can use:
http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/0df299ba-15ef-11e1-b4b1-00144feabdc0.html#axzz1fHzgx4TV
FINANCIAL TRANSACTIONS TAX (FTT) WILL HIT WORKERâS PENSION SAVINGS (The FTT isnât a tax on bankers, itâs a tax on pension plans.)
by Lars Oxelheim, PhD, Lund Institute of Economic Research, Lund, Sweden (Professor and Chairman of the Swedish Network for European Studies in Economics and Business)
âThe fact is that the FTT will directly affect ordinary citizens in Europe. One area in particular is the impact on pensions of workers active today. When they set aside part of their salary for a pension, tax will be levied and the initial investment will be reduced. Furthermore, every time the worker reallocates his pension fund, or if the fund does it for him, the tax will be due. A reallocation will trigger the tax both when the assets are disposed of and when new ones are acquired in the same fund (or in another pension fund). Since the tax is compounding, the overall impact on the pension is substantial.â
"Just to give an indication, a 30-year-old worker, retiring at the age of 65, having a pension fund yielding 5 per cent per annum, with a turnover of the portfolio of 1.5 times a year, will see his pension reduced by 5 per cent due to the Tobin tax."
âThe FTT is presented as directed at the financial industry, but eventually the man in the street is the one to foot the bill.â
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http://www.risk.net/life-and-pensio...ction-tax-proposals-hit-pensions-hard-experts
Pension funds could soon have to bear the cost of a Europe-wide tax on equity, bonds, currency and derivative transactions.
âIn fact, one of the conclusions by the International Monetary Fund in its report, A Fair and Substantial Contribution by the Financial Sector, was that the âreal burden may fall largely on final consumers rather than, as often seems to be supposed, earnings in the financial sector.â It further adds that a tax levied on transactions at one stage âcascadesâ into prices at all further stages of production.â
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http://www.efinancialnews.com/story/2011-11-14/dutch-fund-warns-ftt-would-cost-billions
Dutch fund warns FTT would cost âbillionsâ
âGuus Warringa, chief legal counsel and board member of APG Asset Management, said: âThe rough calculations point to a multi-billion euro damage just for Dutch pension funds⦠The man on the street will pick up the cheque.â