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Posted On: 05/15/2017 6:28:19 AM
Post# of 4611
An idea gaining some ground in the UK. . .
WHAT IS A ROBIN HOOD TAX?
A Robin Hood Tax is a tiny tax on the financial sector that could generate billions of pounds annually to fight poverty and climate change at home and abroad. Small change for the banks - big change for those hit hardest by the financial crisis.
Also known as a Financial Transactions Tax (FTT), a Robin Hood Tax is a tiny tax of about 0.05% on transactions like stocks, bonds, foreign currency and derivatives, which could raise up to £250 billion a year globally. FTTs are well-tested, cheap to implement and hard to avoid.
In fact, there are already lots of different Robin Hood taxes implemented by many countries, including in the UK. We think there should be a lot more of them, particularly in areas not yet taxed, like transactions of bonds and derivatives.
Importantly, transaction taxes are also good in that they would reduce the number of the most risky trades, the gambling which helped to trigger the 2008 financial crisis.
http://www.robinhoodtax.org.uk/faq
WHAT IS A ROBIN HOOD TAX?
A Robin Hood Tax is a tiny tax on the financial sector that could generate billions of pounds annually to fight poverty and climate change at home and abroad. Small change for the banks - big change for those hit hardest by the financial crisis.
Also known as a Financial Transactions Tax (FTT), a Robin Hood Tax is a tiny tax of about 0.05% on transactions like stocks, bonds, foreign currency and derivatives, which could raise up to £250 billion a year globally. FTTs are well-tested, cheap to implement and hard to avoid.
In fact, there are already lots of different Robin Hood taxes implemented by many countries, including in the UK. We think there should be a lot more of them, particularly in areas not yet taxed, like transactions of bonds and derivatives.
Importantly, transaction taxes are also good in that they would reduce the number of the most risky trades, the gambling which helped to trigger the 2008 financial crisis.
http://www.robinhoodtax.org.uk/faq
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