The Green Party has welcomed the
renewed EU initiative to introduce a Financial Transaction Tax, although
concerned the measure is currently seen only as part of the Euro rescue
package.
Green Party Policy Coordinator,
Stuart Jeffery said:
“No other rules, monitoring, bonus taxes or
Government-appointed directors so effectively tackle the roots of the ‘socially
useless’ speculative trading that brought the world financial system close to
collapse in 2008, and again now. The Tobin tax is simply too good to be used as
an emergency fundraiser for the bail-out.
"Sadly the coalition seems
to have little appetite for curbing the excessive risk-taking of the bankers or
for helping to protect savers. A financial transaction tax would help do these
things and also raise important income to address the increasing problems that
we face. The stakes are too high to allow the banks to crash the economy again.
“The Green Party has endorsed the
idea of the Tobin tax for many years, supporting
the view that the proceeds could contribute to overseas development aid. The
urgent need for an FTT is not as a bail-out, or for revenue-raising, but to curtail
the bloated casino “investment” banking sector.”
While world-wide application of
FTT is desirable, the Green Party believes it could be introduced at a low rate
throughout Europe to set an example to the USA and other major financial
centres. It can also represent a useful measure to support the rebalancing of
the UK economy now widely agreed as necessary.
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