Owen Tudor
Some people have very short attention spans. The resurgence of the global left after the Great Depression took a decade and a half (and a world war). The campaign for a UK national minimum wage took at least a dozen years. The Robin Hood Tax campaign has been running for just over a year, and some people wonder why people aren’t paying it yet, or think we’ve lost. So, as the heads of EU governments meet at the end of this week, it’s time to reflect on how far the campaign has come, and how far we’ve still got to go. But make no mistake, this is a campaign that is on its way to victory, if we keep up the pressure.
First, the campaign has been staggeringly successful in several respects – and as my examples suggest, we’ve barely begun in historical terms. When the idea began to surface in 2009 – Adair Turner’s speech in the summer, Gordon Brown’s intervention at the G20 Finance Ministerial in the autumn – it was obviously an old one in some ways: John Maynard Keynes first proposed a transactions tax in 1936 and James Tobin had suggested a currency transactions tax in 1973. But the relatively recent rapid growth of the derivatives market meant that the call for a Financial Transactions Tax was qualitatively new, especially because for the first time it would be not just a market regulator as Keynes and Tobin had proposed, but a major money-spinner. And as the IMF have reported, at least 16 of the G20 economies have had some form of FTT in place over the last decade or two.
The call for a full-blooded FTT – shares, derivatives, currency – was slammed by the IMF, the Financial Times (mostly by omission), and many commentators. Often, the response was that campaigners were well-meaning but naive, or that this was a nice idea, but totally unrealistic. Launching our UK campaign in February 2010 with a Richard Curtis/Bill Nighy videoundoubtedly gave us hundreds of column inches and massive popular appeal, but it did, admittedly, allow people to accuse us of putting form before substance. But that massive popular appeal (250,000 supporters on Facebook, and majority support inpolls across western Europe) was what got us through the front door of the media, governments and international institutions. That, and the support of a growing number of civil society organisations and economists (350 holders of a PhD in economics signed a letter in support a year ago: the latest attracted over 1,000). Even some banks have supported the idea.
Two major multilateral institutions, the IMF and the European Commission, have been converted from slamming the idea as unrealistic to admitting that it is feasible and progressive. Now Bill Gates is working on a report on innovative sources of funding for development for the French G20 Presidency. Governments in the developed economies where the financial transactions primarily take place (and where the tax would therefore be levied) and in the developing and emerging economies which would benefit from spending the income on development aid and tackling climate change, have come out in support. And as concern over speculation has grown, those worried about such things have become more supportive (most recently UNCTAD, who have backed an FTT to tackle commodity speculation, following the leader of UNAIDS last summer). The European Parliament, the French, German and Spanish Parliaments have all recently carried resolutions supporting an FTT. So has Brazil’s, the joint ACP-EU Parliamentary Assembly and Francophone African Finance Ministers. The Governments of Austria, Belgium, Bolivia, Greece, Luxemburg, Slovakia and South Africaare in favour. At international events on development or climate change (as with the Bonn talks this week) there are always FTT campaigners present, and there will be a third civil society Global Day of Action this week, following up earlier events in May 2010 and February 2011.
Not everyone is convinced, and there are still arguments to be had about how to implement FTTs: such as gradually implementing currency levies, stamp duties on share transactions, and then on derivatives. We still have to convince some people that financial institutions won’t shop around if some countries adopt FTTs unilaterally; that the costs will mostly not be passed on to ordinary people because they will mostly be paid by high net worth individuals; that FTTs will reduce speculation and uncertainty rather than increase it; and even that overseas aid and tackling climate change is possible or desirable.
But the argument now is really about “how” and “when”. Some people won’t support an FTT until those technical details have been ironed out, while others accept that – as with almost every other tax – those are questions to be determined once the principle has been adopted.
So here’s the timetable. This week at the European Council meeting, heads of government will still be debating both “whether” and “how”, and an FTT probably won’t be on the official agenda. Next week, or in July, the European Commission will publish its impact assessment on FTTs (as well as other banking taxes) and will reveal that FTTs are feasible (as we already know from the IMF study – but as recently as April, diehard opponents in the Commission held sway). As European Union or Eurozone countries move closer to an agreement in principle during the autumn, the G20 summit in Cannes in November and the COP17 UN climate talks in Durban in December will probably see a coalition of the willing emerge – countries that are willing to start down the path of extending the FTTs that the IMF have already identified as being in place. It will take 2012 and maybe 2013 for those taxes to be introduced, and a couple more years before it becomes clear enough that the sky has not fallen in for other governments to realise either that they now have cover to be brave, or reason to catch up.
By the time the world reaches the deadline for achieving the Millennium Development Goals in 2015, we should – at last – have the means to pay for them in place. I look forward to seeing the Curtis/Nighy video that celebrates that achievement, but I suspect that by then they’ll already be pushing the next great crusade.
The Robin Hood Tax will set us free. Don't forget the common man too has capital.
ReplyDeleteA quote from Hitler's 1922 Munich speech: We were told that capitalism would be destroyed, and when we ventured to remind one or other of these famous statesmen and said 'Don't forget the Jews too have capital,' then the answer was: 'What are you worrying about? Capitalism as a whole will now be destroyed, the whole people will now be free. We are not fighting Jewish or Christian capitalism, we are fighting every capitalism: we are making the people completely free.'