Hi all...
You own the airwaves tomorrow (Sat.) from 8 to 10 am on WHVW 950
AM
http://www.whvw.net -- call in at 483-9489 with whatever might be
on your mind to be part of the mix on the air w/Rich C. and
me!...
[...and let us know if you'd like to join Hudson Valley Clean
Energy as a sponsor of our WHVW show...]
[pass it on]
Joel
242-3571/876-2488
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Here's one we'll be discussing tomorrow morning...
[note-- thx to all who came out to our rally today!...30+, with
Cablevision, Time-Warner, Elisa Sumner!]
Published on
Thursday, February 11, 2010 by YES! Magazine
Time to Tax Financial Speculation
For those of us
who want the financial industry to serve people and the planet rather
than dominate them, this is the most exciting reform under serious
consideration on the world stage.
by Sarah
Anderson
For decades, international activists have been pushing the idea of
a tax on financial transactions. Such a tax would give us a twofer: a
drop in short-term speculation that serves no productive purpose and
leads to dangerous bubbles, and 2) loads of money that could be used
for good things, like health, climate, and jobs programs.
Today, we're closer to achieving this two-for-one deal than we'll
probably ever be in our lifetimes. Reeling from the worst financial
crisis in 80 years, policymakers are not only desperate for new
sources of revenue, they're more open to rethinking the role of Wall Street and making sure it serves real economic needs.
To take advantage of these new opportunities, a wide range of
activists, including trade unionists, international health advocates,
and climate justice groups, have come together to move this
decades-old proposition into practice. Their efforts are gaining
traction-and even some celebrity support.
The specific proposal is to tax trades of all types of financial
assets, including stock, derivatives, and currencies. The tax rate
would be so low that ordinary investors wouldn't even notice it. Some
U.S. legislative proposals would even exempt retirement funds and
mutual funds, the primary middle class investment vehicles. The real
target would be the hedge fund investors and other high fliers in the
global casino, who make most of their money through high-frequency
betting on short-term market movements that often have nothing to do
with what's going on in the
real economy. Since the tax
would apply to each of these transactions, it would make this type of
speculative gambling much less profitable and encourage more
long-term, patient investment.
The Center for Economic and Policy Research has analyzed the likely impact of a set of taxes, ranging from
0.01 percent on currency transactions to 0.25 percent on stock trades.
Assuming that trading volumes dropped by 50 percent, these taxes could
raise more than $175 billion per year in the United States
alone.
The call for such taxes has been particularly loud in Europe, where
activists have managed to win promises of support from leaders of the
three largest economies-the United Kingdom, Germany, and France. But
more pressure is needed to make speculation taxes a
reality.
In the UK, activists have teamed up with filmmaker Richard Curtis
(Four Weddings and a Funeral, Notting Hill, Bridget
Jones' Diary) to put some star power behind the cause. Through
a creative media
campaign being launched
today, they aim to secure commitments from candidates vying for votes
in the upcoming general election.
One of the campaign tools Curtis has produced is this video, starring British actor Bill Nighy (who you'll
recognize from his roles as Davy Jones in one of the Pirates of the
Caribbean movies or as the ribald aging pop singer in Love
Actually) as a haughty banking executive whose arguments against
the tax completely unravel in the course of three minutes. The UK
groups kicked off their campaign by projecting a giant image of
ordinary people wearing Robin Hood masks and the slogan "Be Part of
the World's Greatest Bank Job" on the side of the Bank of
England.
In the United States, we may not yet have Hollywood spokespeople, but
we do have prominent business leaders on our side,
including John
Bogle, founder of the
Vanguard Mutual Fund. We also have bills to create financial
speculation taxes in both the House and the Senate, introduced by Rep.
Peter DeFazio (D-OR) and Sen. Tom Harkin (D-IA).
President Obama is not yet on board. Recently, he did call for a new
fee on the top 50 banks. This is a positive, but far more modest,
approach-it wouldn't directly affect speculation, would leave hedge
funds off the hook, and would generate far less revenue.
U.S. activists are hoping to see a shift in the administration's
position by the time Obama travels to Toronto in June for a summit
with the leaders of the other G20 big economies. Americans for
Financial Reform (AFR), a coalition of more than 200 labor unions,
consumer groups, and other activist organizations, has been working to
raise the profile of the issue in the media and on Capitol Hill and
recently sent this
letter to the president,
urging his support. AFR is also working with other U.S. and
international activists to coordinate pressure on key governments and
the International Monetary Fund, which is carrying out a feasibility
study of the issue at the G20's request.
Taxing financial speculation won't single-handedly prevent another
crisis or solve the world's climate and jobs crises. But for those of
us who want the financial industry to serve people and the planet
rather than dominate them, this is the most exciting reform under
serious consideration on the world stage. And it is an idea whose time
has come.
Sarah Anderson wrote this
article for YES!
Magazine, a national,
nonprofit media organization that fuses powerful ideas with practical
actions. Sarah directs the Global Economy Project at
the Institute for
Policy Studies in
Washington, DC.