Make it your homepage |   E-mail: Subscribe Unsubscribe

Australian Department of Defence Selects Accenture for Human Resources Transformation Project

This text is replaced by the Flash movie.

Sunday, February 12, 2012
News Making Money

U.S. Chamber Warns Against Taxing Financial Transactions

12/03/2010 11:23 (701 Day 21:56 minutes ago)

The FINANCIAL -- The U.S. Chamber of Commerce's Center for Capital Markets Competitiveness on March 11 warned against proposals that would tax American financial transactions, releasing a study highlighting the dangers to Main Street.

ADVERTISEMENT

 

The Chamber also released a poll that shows that most Americans oppose taxing all stock trades and similar financial transactions, including stocks purchased by mutual funds on behalf of investors and future retirees.

 

"Taxing financial transactions will do nothing to create jobs. It will hurt average investors, reduce savings, and make it harder for America's job creators to recover from the economic crisis." said David Hirschmann, president and CEO of the Chamber's Center for Capital Markets Competitiveness. "Today's highly liquid markets make it possible for average investors to get the best price and pay dramatically lower transactions costs when they buy and sell stocks. And, with more investment, they fuel the capital needs of businesses of every size."

 

The study, Examining the Main Street Benefits of our Modern Financial Markets, was conducted by Charles Jones, the Robert W. Lear Professor of Finance and Economics at Columbia Business School, and Erik Sirri, a Professor of Finance at Babson College and former director of the SEC Division of Trading and Markets.

 

The study describes how the growth and sophistication of U.S. modern financial markets make markets fairer and more efficient. They have expanded investment opportunities for individuals and retirees and improved access to capital for U.S. businesses. It also examines how a significant change such as a financial transactions tax can not only harm Wall Street, but Main Street. The proposed tax would likely more than double the cost of transactions and send trading back to the levels of the 1980s.  The study shows that cutting liquidity would increase volatility,  make our markets less competitive, and reduce the investment and retirement savings of all Americans.

 

"This is a big step in the wrong direction for an economy trying to regain strength and jumpstart job growth," Hirschmann stated. "This proposal would starve cash-strapped companies and cripple our efficient, transparent, and liquid markets. The good news is that a majority of Americans agree that it's a bad idea."

 

According to an independent poll of 800 U.S. registered voters by Lombardo Consulting Group from March 10, 2010, 70% of respondents said that they opposed or strongly opposed a tax on stock trades and similar transactions, with 61% of respondents agreeing that new taxes on banks and other financial institutions would "just do more damage to the economy."

 

The Chamber has been calling for comprehensive regulatory reform since well before the financial crisis and supports effective and forward-looking reform that will restore certainty and confidence to the marketplace.

 

Since its inception three years ago, the Center for Capital Markets Competitiveness has led a bipartisan effort to modernize and strengthen the outmoded regulatory systems that have governed our capital markets. The CCMC is committed to working aggressively with the administration, Congress, and global leaders to implement reforms to strengthen the economy, restore investor confidence, and ensure well-functioning capital markets.

 

 

Make Your Comment

Add NewSearchRSS
Only registered users and facebook social network members can write comments!

This text is replaced by the Flash movie.





TRAVEL BIZ »
PRESS RELEASES »
FINANCIAL »
UKRAINE »
GEORGIA »
WORLD »
BANKS »
BUSINESS »
TECH »
MARKETS »
B SCHOOLS »
SPECIAL REPORTS »

Politics
Israel’s Peres vows cooperation with Greek Cyprus in gas drillingIsraeli

04/11/2011 04:38 (100 Day 05:41 minutes ago)

The FINANCIAL -- President Shimon Peres had talks with Greek Cypriot leader Dimitris Christofias during a key visit to the island on Thursday, discussing gas finds in the eastern Mediterranean, a discovery that has sparked a crisis between Turkey and Greek Cyprus.

 

Read more...
Markets
NASDAQ Welcomes Synacor Inc. to the NASDAQ Global Select Market

11/02/2012 02:54 (1 Day 06:25 minutes ago)

The FINANCIAL -- The NASDAQ OMX Group announced that the trading of Synacor Inc,commenced on the NASDAQ Global Select Market on February 10, 2012.

INSURANCE
Nicolas Burnet appointed Chief Financial Officer of Global Life business

11/02/2012 04:00 (1 Day 05:19 minutes ago)

The FINANCIAL -- Zurich Financial Services Group announces the appointment of Nicolas Burnet to the position of Chief Financial Officer Global Life, with immediate effect.

Read more...






Developed by Aleksandre Chiabrishvili

Design built by Creo Group