The Financial Transactions Tax is soon to be top of the political agenda once again in Europe.
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Teresa Pearce is MP for Erith and Thamesmead and a member of the Treasury Committee
Though the financial transactions tax (FTT) has long been on the political radar, it may be about to shoot up the news agenda once again.
European ministers are set to meet on 22 June to debate a raft of issues, including, it seems likely, the FTT.
With a vocal advocate in the shape of President Hollande having recently come into office, FTT remains at the forefront of the minds of European leaders.
Our own prime minister’s vehement opposition to the very principle of the FTT (with his speaking occasionally of a global deal but doing little to drive forward any such initiative) is but one issue where he is out of step with much of the continent.
Whilst parliamentarians (including myself) in this country have expressed approval for the FTT through various means, the wider Labour Party will debate the issue in some depth in the coming days.
Amongst many interesting documents sent to the party’s National Policy Forum which meets at the end of this week is a submission from the Robin Hood Tax coalition which advocates Labour adopting the FTT as party policy.
The FTT – which rolls out the present £3bn raised through the stamp duty on share transactions to further taxes on bonds and derivatives – has the potential to raise £20bn per annum in the UK: over six times the size of the Green Investment Bank, ten times the amount the government’s proposed pension fund investment platform will raise, and twelve times the revenue often linked to that flagship Lib Dem policy (at least before the last election), the mansion tax.
Labour’s five point plan for growth has offered a much needed positive counterbalance to the coalition’s negative message of austerity. With the government’s slashing of public spending leading to economic stagnation, Ed Balls, Rachel Reeves and others are to be congratulated for their sterling work in questioning the downward spiral of Osborne’s economics.
The green shoots of recovery set in motion by the last Labour budget of March 2010 have been choked by the coalition’s anti-growth approach, and Labour has held them to account. But there is more work to be done.
Though it accomplished historic achievements in several areas, the last government could, it has been argued, have done more to clamp down on financial speculation. Labour must learn the lessons here.
• As Europe looks set to back a Robin Hood Tax, Osborne remains on the side of the 1% 16 May 2012
• Will President Hollande be able to turn France – and the Euro Area – around? 8 May 2012
• Robin Hood Tax gains momentum – on the continent 3 Jan 2012
The FTT is a potential double-win for our economy in that it curbs unwanted financial speculation whilst creating a revenue stream that can be invested in more worthwhile pursuits. Tackling climate change and meeting our international development commitments are two areas that would benefit from such additional revenues. But the FTT can deliver economic growth too.
When the European Commission published its proposals for an EU-wide FTT it was met with howls of derision from the right-wing press. Initial modeling did indeed indicate that such a tax could have a negative impact on growth of up to 0.5%.
Yet, it was later shown, the EC hadn’t run the numbers as best they might. Essentially, as Avinash Persaud – former Head of Currency and Commodity Research at J.P. Morgan – has shown, they discounted the positive effects on jobs and growth using the receipt of the tax could have, and simply assumed that any FTT would equate to ‘digging a hole in the ground and put the revenues [from such a tax] there.’
Whilst the current government may run the economy on such principles, Labour has always held a more positive and dynamic view of the power of government to shape our economy.
The state does not stand as a merely passive instrument which must get out of the way of market forces, but can be a dynamic economic player in its own right. It can, and should, act to curb excessive speculation. It can, and should, invest the capital raised by taxing such practices for the good of the majority. As Persaud shows, the effect of a well-designed FTT would be to make a positive, not negative, impact on growth.
This could, it is true, take many forms. A ‘British Investment’ (or ‘National Infrastructure’) Bank has been hypothesised by various commentators over the past few months. Either through direct investment or facilitating that of the private sector, there is much a pro-active government could do with £20bn.
Similarly, there are the provisions of the five point plan: a jobs guarantee, bringing forward long term infrastructure projects, lowering the rate of VAT, cutting it to 5% on home improvements and a one year national insurance break for every small firm which takes on extra workers. An FTT would help build upon such pledges, possibly expand them, and could also help fund other measures to jumpstart our economy.
We are three years away from the next election, and Jon Cruddas’s formal policy review work has only just started. He, and the National Policy Forum meeting this weekend, have much to consider. The FTT is worth serious thought during such discussions.
49 Responses to “The financial transactions tax has the potential to raise £20 billion a year for the UK”
Alex Braithwaite
RT @leftfootfwd: The financial transactions tax has the potential to raise £20 billion a year for the UK http://t.co/qlZhHN8h
Anonymous
That’s right, you can’t pay your way like the 99%.
You don’t need to use ATM’s of course, so your suggestion…
Richard Carr
MP @tpearce003 on FTT, Labour party + growth. See @leftfootfwd article http://t.co/6ZmXLKhp ahead of robin hood submission to NPF this w/e.
Anonymous
Bye bye Europe.
FTT taxes the entire transaction infrastructure that all of us use. Individuals will pay all of this tax. For investors, investment yields will drop. Businesses use the investing infrastructure, meaning the cost of goods and services rise. IMF’s FTT Final Report For The G-20, June 2010, “Its real burden may fall largely on final consumers rather than, as often seems to be supposed, earnings in the financial sector.”
UK’s European Scrutiny Committee citing the EU Commission’s FTT Impact Assessment (Even Before the Damaging Relocation Effects): “a 3.43% fall in EU GDP equates to a fall in economic output worth €421 (£362) billion and a 0.34% fall in employment equates to a loss of 812,000 jobs.”
UK’s Economic Sub-Committee of the House of Lords, “The FTT is likely to induce a loss in GDP between five and 20 times larger than the revenues raised from the tax.”
Sweden’s short-lived FTT raised 3 percent of projected revenues, not enough to cover the cost of collecting the tax.
Selohesra
Most people accept need to rebalance economy so there is less reliance on the City. I would suggest growing the other areas but the FTT achieves the aim by destroying the financial services industry or at least sending it off to other more friendly jurisdictions