Quote from sheda:
Ah there going to do some magic with a second assement now.
Quote from tomdavis:
The timing of this "second assessment" is comical. Denmark takes over the EU Council Presidency and immediately bashes the FTT because it reduces GDP and kills jobs. Then, magically, the EU comes out with new economic projections. What a joke.
CDA wants clarification transaction tax
The European Commission (EC) to clarify the precise effects of introducing a transaction tax on economic growth. MEP Corinne Wortmann (CDA) has questions about the EC, let them know Tuesday.
According to the politician outlines the governance of the EU a much rosier picture of the financial transactions tax, for example, the Central Planning Bureau (CPB). Wortmann refers to a commission official said last month that the introduction of transaction tax on long term has little effect on economic growth.
In analysis of the EC and the CPB, however, assumed economic contraction. Wortmann therefore demands quick clarification on the figures. "That the financial sector should contribute to the damage of the financial and economic crisis is beyond dispute, but it must be properly done."
* The financial sector should be subject to greater taxation, but taxing financial transactions may not be the best solution, International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde said on Monday. "The financial sector must contribute more," she told the German Council For Foreign Relations in Berlin, but "I would tend to favour a system that is based on the sum of profits, compensation, and salaries, in general." "I would not jump to the FTT [Financial Transaction Tax] because it is the FTT," she added. However, "we have to find a way to make the financial sector contribute more." [08:25 ET]
Quote from Rantany:
IMF director Christine Lagarde on FTT:
https://mninews.deutsche-boerse.com...date-imfs-lagarde-need-more-timely-ecb-easing
Glad to hear. As finance minister of France she was a proponent of the FTT.
Quote from Rantany:
IMF director Christine Lagarde on FTT:
https://mninews.deutsche-boerse.com...date-imfs-lagarde-need-more-timely-ecb-easing
Glad to hear. As finance minister of France she was a proponent of the FTT.
Quote from sheda:
'Mr Semeta also said a new impact assessment carried out by the Commission would show that an FTT would have a ânegligibleâ impact on growth â once assumptions about the economic benefits of the resulting government spending were taken into account. A previous assessment had warned of a 1.8 per cent dent in EU economic output in the long term.'
Ah there going to do some magic with a second assement now.
The European Commission confirmed, on 23 January, that it plans to publish âin the coming weeksâ a new assessment of the impact of the introduction of a financial transaction tax (FTT) in the Union. Its aim is to cajole the United Kingdom and...

BRUSSELS - Ministers from the 17 euro countries and several other European countries have agreed on Monday the budget pact.
Expected that the Government at the summit next week to finally agree on the new treaty.
Which made Minister Jan Kees de Jager announced after his discussions with his European colleagues.
About the budget agreement, 26 of the 27 EU Member States in early December in outline already. The past week has been working on the elaboration of the Convention, that tighter fiscal discipline on countries to enforce.
In March the treaty should be ratified. De Jager spoke of a''historic''pact.