French President Nicolas Sarkozy has made it quite clear he is determined to  forge ahead with a controversial Financial Transactions Tax (FTT), even  if it means his country is the only one to implement it. It seems  likely then, that some form of FTT will be introduced in 2012, though  it remains to be seen whether such a tax will be at the level of the EU,  the Euro zone, the new “Euro-zone Plus” group…or just France.
The  European Commission has been pushing for an eventual EU-wide tax, and  its proposal was presented to European finance ministers last year by Tax Commissioner Algirdas Šemeta.
Commissioner Semeta commented on the Debating Europe website topic on the issue (
here),  answering to some comments, that the financial institutions will just pass the charges to the customers.
  
It is important to be clear on  the scope of the proposed FTT. We want to tax the trading of financial  instruments like securities, bonds and derivatives, not the day-to-day  financial activities of ordinary citizens or companies. The conclusion  of insurance contracts, mortgage lending, consumer and business credits  or payment services will, for example, not be included in the scope of  this tax. More than 85% of all the transactions to be taxed are  transactions within the financial sector, where, for example, one bank  trades with another one. So, there is no direct client immediately  identifiable to whom the banks might want to pass on the tax incurred.
 Thus, citizens, private  households and SMEs will not be directly affected by the tax, unless  they themselves invest on financial markets. However, they might be  indirectly affected by an increase in capital costs and lower financial  asset prices in case financial institutions want to recover the cost of  the tax from business with their clients not linked to financial  markets. But these effects will probably be limited as the tax rate  proposed is low and would in the first place fall on financial  companies. 
Even if the bank was to pass on the FTT to its client, such  as a private household, the additional charge would be rather low. In  case a private household was to intervene on financial markets, for  example through buying or selling shares, it should only be charged an  additional 0.01 to 0.1% of the transaction volume. If a private  household wanted to purchase, for example, shares in the amount of  €10,000 his bank might charge a €10 FTT for this transaction. Of course,  the more frequently a person traded (with the help of his bank) on  stock exchanges, the more frequently the investor would have to pay the  tax.
  
It is, indeed, expected that the  shareholders of the banks and the investment bankers will have to  shoulder parts of the tax, for example through lower dividend payments  and reduced bonuses paid out. This effect would not be unwarranted, as a  golden rule of sound public policy requires that those benefiting from a  public policy should also be those that should pay for its provision.
Another point was that financial institutions will just move to places like Switzerland, where there is less regulation. Mr Semeta replied: 
The FTT proposal should be seen  as a key step to making progress on a global solution to taxing  financial transactions. A global FTT is the first best solution. The  Commission has always been in favor of an FTT at the global level and  we think that it would make sense to support this position by leading by  example.
We believe that if we can show  that such a tax works also at a (sufficiently broadly defined) regional  level and generates substantial revenue without harming the overall  economic development, then other regions of the world will follow.  However, any “local” FTT needs a number of anti-avoidance and  anti-relocation measures. 
We want to set a good example to promote the  FTT at the global level – as has been asked from us by the European  Parliament and the heads of state of the EU Member States. The  Commission is not the only one to advocate this idea – there were many  supporters at the Millennium Development Summit in NYC recently, for  example, but it is true that there is no universal consensus.
We will continue discussing  this with our G20 partners. I think the sounder, more solid the evidence  of the potential benefits of such a tax we can provide, the greater our  chances are of convincing them to work with us on a global FTT.
Nevertheless, already with the  legal proposal of the Commission there are a lot of potential loopholes  that have been closed. Actually, relocating a transaction (for example,  from Frankfurt to Zurich) does not really help in circumventing the  payment of the tax, as it is not the place where the transaction takes  place that determines tax liability but the place of establishment of  the parties in the transaction.
Next argument that was expressed by debaters on the website was the case of Sweden and its experience in the late 1980s. The imposition of a FTT on  equities and bonds was a total disaster as trading simply moved  overseas. Mr Semeta commented: 
Sweden introduced a 50 basis  points tax on the purchase or sale of equity securities in January 1984.  A “round trip” transaction (purchase and sale) resulted therefore in a  100 basis points tax. The tax applied to all equity security trades in  Sweden using local brokerage services as well as to stock options. The  fact that only local brokerage services were taxed is, in the  literature, seen as the main design problem of the Swedish system.
We studied different countries’  experiences and we designed the tax carefully to avoid the kind of  failure Sweden experienced. The Commission’s proposal includes in  particular the following features:
• It has a much broader tax base;
• It makes a link to the residence of financial institutions at EU level;
• It considers financial  institutions of third countries with a branch established in the EU or  even without such a branch, i.e. makes them taxable; in the latter case  when they interact with EU counter-parties (subject to certain  conditions).
To put it in other words: Sweden  covered local brokerage services whereas the EU FTT would cover  transactions by broadly defined financial institutions established in  the EU, including pure third country-based institutions when they  interact with EU counter-parties. In case of the EU FTT,  an easy evasion is not possible if there is a link with the EU  territory. Joint and several liability rules ensure enforceability.  In addition, a possible move from equity trades to other  financial instruments would not be an option under the EU FTT as  financial instruments are comprehensively covered.
Moreover, an EU framework  provides for a coordinated approach in the EU which should mitigate the  problem of relocation and distortion of competition.
The final comment was that the FTT actually does not bring any extra revenue, in fact it shrinks them. Mr Semeta replied: 
The Commission’s extensive  analysis show that the implementation of an FTT at EU level, provided  that the negative impacts of major risks identified would be minimized,  could raise around €50 billion per year, largely depending on market  reactions. Also, in case the profits of financial institutions were  negatively affected, some offsetting knock-on effects on profit taxes  could be expected. The tax will, thus, help to generate revenues for the  public budget which could be used for different purposes.
There is indeed a degree of  uncertainty on the revenue from an FTT, because it would be a new and  innovative tax, and as asset prices underlying these transactions are  volatile. This mainly holds for shares and derivatives thereof.  Hopefully, also the market volumes for government bonds should decline  once budget consolidation progresses. This risk can be managed by using  cautious projections for the budget.
When it comes to estimating the  effects of such a tax on GDP, a lot of uncertainty exists as well. The  figure of 1.7% refers to a deviation of GDP from its baseline scenario  in the long run. Thus, it describes a cumulative effect over several  decades, while the revenue estimations provided refer to annual  revenues. Also, some of the assumptions underlying the concrete model  run (such as the design of the tax and the way how enterprises finance  their investment activities or how the revenues generated will be  recycled) introduced a significant bias in the estimation. 
Correcting  for these effects, the more appropriate figure might therefore be in the  order of 0.5 to 1.0%. In any case, we should not forget that such  figures are derived from macroeconomic model simulations which are  specifically difficult when it comes to analyzing financial markets.
My personal opinion was always “make the financial sector pay!” Someone needs to regulate this sector and it is about time to do so, as we have seen what non-regulation of the Banks and the Markets can do. What should be done with any revenues raised? We should use them to erase and pay off any debts of the debt ridden countries. First in Europe if the FTT is passed, or the whole World if this plan takes a global dimension!
As for if the UK will be able to avoid the FTT, I insist that they should not. Enough with this elitism. Elite countries, nations, people, clubs and institutions. Enough with the tax havens and financial centers of the  world. Some countries are only separate states from other nations just  to serve the role of a tax haven for the rich, while the rest of us are  trapped and pay their share. (San Marino from Italy, Monaco from France,  Liechtenstein from Switzerland, ect).
What these countries are actually doing, is forcing some countries and its people to be poorer from all this tax revenues lost while others are becoming richer, thus contributing to the global inequality. The  sole role of their existence is to be a safe haven for the money that is  in some cases stolen from the people. 
This money belonged to the people of those countries as taxes that were diverted in Swiss (and other tax havens') bank accounts. Taxes of the rich people that should go to the state, while the ordinary citizens have to bare the weight of paying their share. This can be only called a criminal activity and Switzerland is a part of this. 
In a similar way, Britain plays its part in this Matrix of financial  games and inequality, as they are “one of the most important financial  centers in the world.” So they should own up to it and start playing  fair. Their wealth is down to their role as one of  the countries that has made itself available to the global financial elite. Becoming in this way a place where the  financiers are allowed  to play uncontrollably their games, making profit for themselves. 
Bring on the FTT and thank God that some politicians have the guts to suggest such bold moves that  if passed, they will probably be the first step towards a much fairer Europe.
 
The European Commission has been pushing for an eventual EU-wide tax, and its proposal was presented to European finance ministers last year by Tax Commissioner Algirdas Šemeta.
Even if the bank was to pass on the FTT to its client, such as a private household, the additional charge would be rather low. In case a private household was to intervene on financial markets, for example through buying or selling shares, it should only be charged an additional 0.01 to 0.1% of the transaction volume. If a private household wanted to purchase, for example, shares in the amount of €10,000 his bank might charge a €10 FTT for this transaction. Of course, the more frequently a person traded (with the help of his bank) on stock exchanges, the more frequently the investor would have to pay the tax.
We want to set a good example to promote the FTT at the global level – as has been asked from us by the European Parliament and the heads of state of the EU Member States. The Commission is not the only one to advocate this idea – there were many supporters at the Millennium Development Summit in NYC recently, for example, but it is true that there is no universal consensus.
Correcting for these effects, the more appropriate figure might therefore be in the order of 0.5 to 1.0%. In any case, we should not forget that such figures are derived from macroeconomic model simulations which are specifically difficult when it comes to analyzing financial markets.
As for if the UK will be able to avoid the FTT, I insist that they should not. Enough with this elitism. Elite countries, nations, people, clubs and institutions. Enough with the tax havens and financial centers of the world. Some countries are only separate states from other nations just to serve the role of a tax haven for the rich, while the rest of us are trapped and pay their share. (San Marino from Italy, Monaco from France, Liechtenstein from Switzerland, ect).
What these countries are actually doing, is forcing some countries and its people to be poorer from all this tax revenues lost while others are becoming richer, thus contributing to the global inequality. The sole role of their existence is to be a safe haven for the money that is in some cases stolen from the people.
This money belonged to the people of those countries as taxes that were diverted in Swiss (and other tax havens') bank accounts. Taxes of the rich people that should go to the state, while the ordinary citizens have to bare the weight of paying their share. This can be only called a criminal activity and Switzerland is a part of this.
In a similar way, Britain plays its part in this Matrix of financial games and inequality, as they are “one of the most important financial centers in the world.” So they should own up to it and start playing fair. Their wealth is down to their role as one of the countries that has made itself available to the global financial elite. Becoming in this way a place where the financiers are allowed to play uncontrollably their games, making profit for themselves.
Bring on the FTT and thank God that some politicians have the guts to suggest such bold moves that if passed, they will probably be the first step towards a much fairer Europe.