Imposing a Robin Hood Tax on Trading Securities (S. 1371)
Do you support or oppose this bill?
What is S. 1371?
(Updated July 3, 2018)
This bill would impose a tax on trading securities — particularly stocks, bonds, and derivatives. This tax is commonly referred to as a ‘Robin Hood Tax’ on Wall Street. The tax is designed to reduce risky transactions in financial markets and high-frequency trading.
Stock trades would be taxed at 0.5 percent, bond trades would be taxed at 0.1 percent rate, and derivative trades would be taxed at 0.005 percent. So for example, a stock trade of $1000 would be be subject to a $5 tax, and a derivatives trade of the same amount would have a five cent tax imposed on it.
There would be several exceptions to the transaction tax, including:
Initial issuances of securities;
Short-term debt securities — like notes, bonds, or debentures — that have a fixed maturity of 60 days or less.
This bill outlines penalties for failing to include covered transaction information on a tax return. The Commissioner could rescind the penalties in-part or in-full if those graces promote compliance with this law. Any determinations made by the Commissioner would not be subject to judicial review.
Argument in favor
Some traders on Wall Street have gotten rich through high-frequency trades and risky, speculative investment decisions that endangered the economy. This tax would restore stability to financial markets.
Argument opposed
Speculation is an inherent part of financial markets, trying to reduce it through taxes just makes those markets work less efficiently -- which can create market distortions that this bill wants to avoid.
Impact
People and companies that engage in covered transactions of securities, the IRS, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue.
Cost of S. 1371
A CBO cost estimate is unavailable.
Additional Info
In-Depth: According to this bill’s sponsor, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT), this proposal could raise up to $300 billion in tax revenue per year. Sen. Sanders claims that:
“more than 1,000 economists have endorsed a tax on Wall Street speculation and today some 40 countries throughout the world have imposed a financial transactions tax.”
This bill aims to fund another Sen. Sanders bill — the College for All Act —eliminating undergraduate tuition at 4-year public colleges and universities, reducing student loan interest rates, and refinancing student loans.
Of Note: The European Union proposed a financial transaction tax, taxing stock and bond transactions at a 0.1 percent rate, and derivatives at a 0.01 percent rate -- but it has been met with resistance from some member countries and has been delayed until January 1, 2016. Additionally, there are many questions about whether such a tax could deliver the intended benefits.
There have been some who have blamed market speculation for contributing to the financial crisis, but it may have actually played a role in making the crisis less severe than it otherwise may have been. Speculation plays an integral role financial markets, without it market prices would be less stable, which in turn makes markets less efficient.
Media:
- Sponsoring Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) Press Release
- Senate Budget Committee Summary
- Human Events
- Forbes (Context - Opposed)
- Huffington Post (In Favor)
- Reuters (In Favor)
- Robin Hood Tax (In Favor)
Summary by Eric Revell
(Photo Credit: Flickr user ssoosay)
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