A little goes a long way: Why a small tax on Wall Street trades is a good idea
Americans pay sales taxes on all sorts of things, yet Wall Street traders pay no sales tax on stocks and bonds VIDEO
Topics: Bernie Sanders, Hillary Clinton, Robert Reich, Tax, Wall Street, Video News, Business News, Politics News
This originally appeared on Robert Reich’s blog.
One of Bernie Sanders’s most important proposals didn’t receive enough attention and should become a law even without a president Sanders. Hillary Clinton should adopt it for her campaign.
It’s a tax on financial transactions.
Putting a small tax on financial transactions would have several benefits.
1. Reduce incentives for high speed trading, insider deal making and short term financial betting. Buying and selling stocks and bonds in order to beat others who are buying stocks and bonds is a giant zero sum game. It wastes countless resources, uses up the talents of some of the nation’s best and brightest and subjects financial markets to unnecessary risk.
2. Generate lots of revenue. Even a one tenth of 1 percent transaction tax would raise $185 billion over 10 years according to the non-partisan Tax Policy Center. It could thereby finance public investments that enlarge the economic pie rather than merely rearranging its slices. Investments like better schools and access to college.
3. It’s fair. After all, Americans pay sales taxes on all sorts of goods and services, yet Wall Street traders pay no sales tax on the stocks and bonds they buy, which helps explain why the financial industry generates about 30 percent of America’s corporate profits, but pays only about 18 percent of corporate taxes.