Germany and nine other European Union nations will
press ahead with plans to introduce a financial market transaction tax,
following failed attempt for an agreement to levy it across the EU.
Finance
ministers of the 27-nation EU, who met in Luxembourg on Friday, came to
the conclusion that an agreement to impose the tax across the bloc will
not be possible in the foreseeable future, German Finance Minister, Mr
Wolfgang Schaeuble, told the media after the meeting.
Therefore,
10 nations who are willing to cooperate have decided to move forward by
taking the necessary steps on the national level, and to ask the
European Commission to draw up legislative proposals to introduce the
tax.
Besides Germany, supporters of the tax are
Austria, Belgium, France, Portugal, Slovania, Estonia, Greece, Slovakia
and Spain. Under the EU rules, the proposed tax can be introduced if at
least nine nations support it.
The European
Commission estimates that by charging a tax between 0.01 per cent and
0.05 per cent on a broad range of finance market transactions, more than
€30 billion could be raised annually.
There have
been several unsuccessful attempts in the past to reach an agreement to
introduce the tax in the EU as well as at the international level.
Its
supporters argue that the tax is necessary to stem excessive
speculations in the financial market, to reduce volatility and to
involve financial institutions in sharing the costs of future financial
bailouts.
The plan is vehemently opposed by Britain
and Sweden, which fear that it might lead to an exodus of businesses and
financial institutions from Europe and endanger growth.
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