sign up log in
Want to go ad-free? Find out how, here.

Geoff Simmons says an FTT would leak like a sieve, penalise quite innocent and necessary trade, impede economic activity unnecessarily – all features of a bad tax

Geoff Simmons says an FTT would leak like a sieve, penalise quite innocent and necessary trade, impede economic activity unnecessarily – all features of a bad tax

By Geoff Simmons*

Every time we discuss new taxes, people raise the possible alternative of a Financial Transactions Tax. Known by some as a Robin Hood Tax, or a Tobin Tax, the FTT would put a small charge on every financial transaction made.

It is gaining in popularity around the world and while it could theoretically work if all countries adopted it, so far the results from individual experiments have been far from impressive.

But before we look at the results, we should start by asking why some people want to tax transactions at all.

Why do we want to tax transactions?

Placing a tax on a specific action can raise money, but it also discourages that behaviour. Sometimes that is a bad thing, and sometimes it is a good thing. Taxes on income for example raise a lot of money but also dent the incentive to go out there and earn income, which reduces output and creates a loss to society. The government is betting that voters will be happy to have more government services than income in the pocket. Taxes on pollution on the other hand can raise money, but also reduce pollution at the same time – creating a win/win for society – providing the cost of the pollution-heavy goods don’t rise too much. If taxing financial transactions leads to fewer of them, will we be better or worse off?

Some are convinced we’d be better off. They feel that bankers and traders are getting more than their fair share of benefit out of the globalized economy, that speculation is ‘excessive’, this is contributing to the greater volatility and uncertainty in markets so we’re worse off. Given the billions that pass through the financial sector every day, the idea is that clipping the ticket on each transaction would raise a lot of money and reduce both speculation and volatility in financial markets.

However, not all transactions are bad. Like when you get paid for example, or make a payment on your mortgage. Or send money overseas to pay for your upcoming holiday. Would you mind someone clipping the ticket on all of those? Of course you can specify what kinds of transactions you want to target with a tax, such as house sales (via a stamp duty) or share trades or foreign currency deals. But ordinary people still engage in all of those, at the very least through Kiwisaver.

Sure, some transactions are purely speculative, but an FTT won’t just stop those. It is a sledgehammer and would not discriminate between ‘good’ and ‘bad’ financial transactions.

Impact of a FTT on transactions

One development that has made the FTT easier to implement is the automation of many financial payments, making it difficult to avoid, at least in the jurisdiction in which it’s applied. On the other hand, the increased complexity of international markets means that it is easier for financial institutions to re-route their transactions beyond that jurisdiction simply to avoid the tax. The FTT then would be most effective if applied worldwide.

In the absence of international consensus, a lot depends on the design of tax. Perhaps the most well-known and successful FTT is stamp duty, which in some countries (such as the UK) is levied on house sales. This is typically paid as a percentage of the total house price, which distinguishes it from a capital gains tax. Given the size of the transaction it is hard to get around paying the tax. Stamp duties are fairly well researched and provide a useful example of the impact of a FTT on a market.

Research has found that (unsurprisingly) people respond to FTTs such as stamp duty by reducing the number of taxed transactions made. In other words, house sales drop. This doesn’t alter the intent of transactions, simply the number. Stamp duty hasn’t prevented speculation on housing, nor reduced volatility in the market. Quite the contrary, having fewer transactions can increase the volatility in the market. Fewer transactions can also have their costs in terms of the efficiency of the economy. Stamp duty for example makes it more likely for an elderly person to hold on to a home that is too large for them, and therefore makes it more difficult for families to find the houses they need.

Gathering Revenue

Perhaps the biggest disappointment of the FTT has been in the revenue generation side. Brookings estimate that in the United States a FTT could generate around $0.4% of GDP. That isn’t a huge amount; the New Zealand equivalent would be about $1b. The only way to get more revenue would be to have a higher tax rate on each transaction, which is really impossible if tax dodging is to be avoided, without some global consensus on applying the tax.

The experience of Sweden’s FTT has been interesting. When it was introduced, revenue was far lower than predicted, because of changes in the number of financial transactions. In fact, the lower number of transactions reduced revenue from Sweden’s capital gains tax, so the government ended up with less revenue overall.

In short, the FTT appeals mainly to those who seek to get at “wicked bankers and evil speculators” but it’s pretty naive. It is unlikely to raise a lot of money unless there is a global agreement, otherwise it would leak like a sieve, penalize quite innocent and necessary trade, impede economic activity unnecessarily – all features of a bad tax. In the mean time taxes like the Comprehensive Capital Income Tax (CCIT) seem to have much more potential to raise serious revenue and benefit the economy by closing existing tax loopholes.


Geoff Simmons is an economist working at the Morgan Foundation. This article is here with permission and first appeared here.

We welcome your comments below. If you are not already registered, please register to comment.

Remember we welcome robust, respectful and insightful debate. We don't welcome abusive or defamatory comments and will de-register those repeatedly making such comments. Our current comment policy is here.

11 Comments

Bring in 50% tax on income above 250k

And CGT.

Taxes are too low in NZ for the rich. While the poor are burdened with regressive consumption taxes.

Up
0

The real issue we have to address is the current tax system - lacking any form of
capital gains - leads to a massive mis-allocation of resources to housing and farms.

While individuals can prosper selling houses to each other clearly the nation cannot.

We have to incentivise investments into productive enterprises that create products
that people around the world wish to purchase from which flows the jobs we must create
for a fast expanding population.

In terms of practical implementation a land tax is by far the simplest.
Councils have this already in their rating base.
Whilst the Morgan proposal is the perfect world approach - in the
real world a land tax wins.

As many have failed to grasp - this is not about incremental tax revenue.
It is simply an incentive to favour investments in productive enterprises.

Up
0

Agree entirely JB. We should use the Germans as consultants. My grandparents lived in this kind of world - current account surpluses and we earned more than we spent.

Up
0

Surely a flat rate tax on the loan book is a better, simpler idea? The RBNZ lists the total loans as $418,086,000,000 at the end of June. So 1% per annum would yield $4 billion into the thirsty coffers and would discourage excessive borrowing to boot. What's not to like? Oh, all right, the government could use it to reduce taxes and reduce debts or, far more likely, just waste it. Not much point if it just inflates government salaries.
http://www.rbnz.govt.nz/statistics/s7

Up
0

I suppose as long as a comprehensive capital tax covered human capital by assigning a deemed rate of return (income earned) to people as well it could be fair.

Up
0

Geoff I don't think you have given a lot of thought to an FFT. If an FTT was put on ALL deposits in the Banks, with a wide definition of that word, and replaced income tax, or part thereof, then it would create a lot of 'tax' as it would be a turnover tax. Everybody would be contributing to the country they lived in or, if a company, did business in. I prefer the part thereof because the higher tax take from the FTT would enable the lower income tax rates to be dramatically reduced. I then would increase the higher income tax rates in order to try an reduce the inequality in this country. Unfortunately I have no idea of how much money is 'turned over' each day through the Banks here but I am sure it is a lot. Could somebody who knows how to do this let me know where I can find this out.

Up
0

I think he's not dealt with an FTT concept as an "instead of" rather than an "in addition to". I think it should be set at a rate that it could replace GST altogether and that would not be high at all, quite the contrary as there would be no claiming it back. It would not be worth the effort to try to avoid, but it would spread the load far more evenly and it would solve the whole online purchasing with no GST business, with the stroke of a pen.
Back to the drawing board, with you, Geoff

Up
0

This article is an argument for the status quo which is working very well for only a limited number of NZers.
I'd give a FTT a go because the current system is broken and only suckers pay tax.
As PocketAces says, it should be a replacement for current taxes. Scrap PAYE and Company Taxes ( they're only for idiots that don't structure their finances properly ), and lower GST to 5%. ( any higher encourages avoidance ), By my 'back of matchbox' calculations a FTT of 2 to 2.5% should cover it.

Up
0

This article read as though it is written by someone with a vested interest in seeing that a FTT doesn't happen. (of course it is, he's an economist!) But in reading it he has completely missed the point, which just goes to show he doesn't understand the picture in which it is proposed. Currently there are a lot of loopholes for companies and the wealthy to avoid paying tax, many none is paid at all. All proposals I have seen for a FTT are to completely replace the current system with it, with no loopholes. This would result in capturing all financial transactions, including the current purchases, but also bank transfers, international transfers and every other mechanism that is used to avoid paying tax. It is well recognised that many companies structure their business to avoid paying taxes in any one jurisdiction, so his argument that an FTT needs to be world wide or not at all, is wrong. Any FTT in NZ with no loopholes will capture all transactions that occur in NZ, and thus no company will be able to avoid meeting their responsibilities here.

His example of stamp duty reducing the amount of transactions? Complete red herring, as any FTT tax will be a tax on the value of the transaction, not the number of them so 10 transactions of $10 will net the same tax as one of $100. With the banks having conned the world to get into electronic banking, including funds transfer system for purchases, any FTT will be comparatively simple compared to the current system and probably a lot cheaper to manage and enforce. one other point - the middle and lower incomes will likely be better off as a result.

Up
0

I'da thunk an accountant would be more fearful of an FTT, but that's just me

Up
0

Any FTT in NZ with no loopholes will capture all transactions that occur in NZ, and thus no company will be able to avoid meeting their responsibilities here.

So everyone moves their activity offshore and then...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swedish_financial_transaction_tax

Problem (for financial transactors) solved!

Up
0