Not exact matches
Brazil is one notable example of this, where
new taxes were levied on
financial transactions that were pressuring the Brazilian real,» he said.
Given all the changes over the past three decades, Davidoff citing a study of the impact of
New York
financial transaction taxes from 1932 to 1981 is interesting from a historical perspective but not much more.
The CLC paper predicts the current
financial crisis will create a severe pensions crisis, and a follow - up paper issued on Oct. 29 calls for the creation of a
new pension benefit insurance scheme (financed by the proposed
tax on
financial transactions) to insure annual pension and RRSP benefits for individual Canadians up to $ 60,000 a year.
Instead of rushing into the adoption of a
financial transaction tax, it may behoove us to watch and see whether these
new taxes in Europe work.
He'd also impose
new business
taxes, including a carbon
tax and a
financial transactions tax (a levy on sales of stocks and other securities).
ATTACs principal focus areas at the moment are: the different forms of taxation of
financial transactions, in particular the Tobin
tax on currency speculation; the creation of
new instruments for the regulation and control of finance at the national, European and international levels; the battle against
tax havens and
financial crime; and the demystification of pension funds.
And so far in this campaign, Miliband has distanced himself from
New Labour by adopting a series of left - wing policies: abolishing charitable status for private schools; extending the
tax on bankers» bonuses; supporting the introduction of a mansion
tax on # 2m houses and a so - called Robin Hood
tax on
financial transactions.
Fleet's goal, it said, was to use its skills to fill out the calendar with
new business: other governmental
tax processing, plus
financial and healthcare
transactions.
A
tax on systemically risky
transactions could reshape
financial networks into a
new structure that is less vulnerable to cascading
financial system shocks such as the 2008
financial crisis, according to
new IIASA research published in the Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control.
Even
new «Tobin style»
transaction taxes that have been proposed and introduced following the 2008
financial crisis do not do much to reduce systemic risk, according to previous research.
A
tax on individual
transactions between
financial institutions — based on the level of systemic risk that each
transaction adds to the system — could essentially eliminate the risk of future collapse of the
financial system, according to a
new study recently published in the journal Quantitative Finance.
Also known as a Wall Street
Tax or Robin Hood Tax, the financial transaction tax is a tiny fee on the trades of stocks, bonds, and other financial instruments that would generate hundreds of billions of dollars of new reven
Tax or Robin Hood
Tax, the financial transaction tax is a tiny fee on the trades of stocks, bonds, and other financial instruments that would generate hundreds of billions of dollars of new reven
Tax, the
financial transaction tax is a tiny fee on the trades of stocks, bonds, and other financial instruments that would generate hundreds of billions of dollars of new reven
tax is a tiny fee on the trades of stocks, bonds, and other
financial instruments that would generate hundreds of billions of dollars of
new revenue.
Also known as a
financial transactions tax or Wall Street
tax, it's a tiny
tax on trades of stocks, bonds and other
financial instruments that would generate hundreds of billions of dollars of
new revenue.
The South Korean
Financial Services Commission said that the
new regulatory measures were intended to «reduce room for cryptocurrency
transactions to be exploited for illegal activities, such as crimes, money laundering and
tax evasion.»
However, hidden hazards may lurk under the surface of a
transaction in the form of an outstanding lien, pending legal action against the property, possible
tax issues and more, all of which could place a severe
financial burden on the
new owners.