Tax on financial transactions: easy to design, difficult to implement
French government report on behalf of the European Affairs Committee, filed December 21, 2012 for the French Senate
http://www.senat.fr/rap/r12-259/r12-259.html
Report appears to be critical of the extra-territorial nature of the European Commission's proposal and (if I've understood it correctly) recommends scaling it back to tax only those transactions that occur in the EC-11 zone and where at least one counter-party is resident.
Can anyone shed any light as to whether this report might have any influence in France?
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(google translation)
5. Adopt the principle of "territoriality limited"
All financial transactions should be taxed, but they should be on the territory of those who have adopted the tax. This principle of territoriality limited must be combined with the principle residence of the parties to the transaction.
At this point, we may reasonably require that all financial transactions taking place on the territory of the EU (or a fraction of the territory where enhanced cooperation) is taxed when at least one party is established the said territory, thus avoiding extraterritoralité tax.
It is illusory to believe that the London agree to be taxed and lose its raison d'être by the lack of a massive transfer of activities outside Europe. Also illusory to hope that Luxembourg could accept that the management of investment funds to become more expensive.
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