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16/3/2001
Squaring
The Circle
Will
Pressures to Achieve Millennium Targets Without Raising Taxes Force
Developed Countries to Adopt Tobin Tax Proposals, asks Peter Sain
ley Berry
At
a recent international conference, James Wolfensohn, President of
the World Bank gave a stark warning to the heads of government of
the developed world. He argued that on present trends, none of the
International Development Goals on health and education were likely
to be achieved at the global level, while progress towards the goal
of halving the number of people in poverty was likely to remain
distinctly patchy.
"It
is time to make it clear,
. that development assistance is
not charity, but a vital investment in global peace and security,"
he said. We must remind [major aid donors] that their current levels
of foreign aid, at some 0.24 percent of yearly GDP, fall far short
of the 0.7 percent target they promised to meet. The difference
between these figures is worth a hundred billion dollars a year.
For millions of children, this is the difference between life and
death."
Despite
the pledges there is little sign of the UN target being widely met.
Governments instead prefer to hide behind talk of better aid targeting.
But the reality is that there is no chance of developing countries
as a whole making satisfactory progress towards prosperity and sustainable
development without a very substantial increase in levels of assistance
from the rich world to the poor.
There
is now also the climate change factor to consider. Across large
swathes of Africa and Asia in particular, climatic disturbances
have wrecked harvests over a prolonged period while the economic
disruption caused by the AIDS pandemic is also hampering the achievement
of development targets. At the end of the day it is not a question
of fine-tuning the aid and assistance systems, producing more sensitive
debt relief here or a better directed and monitored aid policy there:
at the end of the day it is a simple question of money.
With
growth slowing in the United States and stagnant in Japan and with
Europe still in the grip of relatively high unemployment, there
are tremendous pressures on all governments to reduce public expenditures.
Faced with the need to keep taxes low on the one hand and an obligation
to provide the wherewithal to make good on their Millennium pledges
to the developing world on the other, there is no question about
who will win. "It's the rich what gets the money, the poor
what gets the blame" wrote the songwriter and he was absolutely
right.
Nevertheless,
the governments of the developed world are coming under increasing
pressure to relieve poverty. This comes only partly from their own
citizens, still less from altruism. The pressure comes from their
own self-interest and desire for self-preservation. Simply put,
rich governments are realising that they are already having to take
expensive action to defend the oasis of the western lifestyle against
the five sixths of the world's population out there in the desert.
Thus
today immigration pressures caused by conflict and economic insecurity
are causing significant problems both in Europe and in the United
States. Ever increasing amounts of money are being spent combating
illegal entry. Conflicts, often driven by poverty, also pose a threat
to security, trade and tourism, quite apart from their humanitarian
consequences. A world population growing by 77 million each year
puts intolerable pressure on resources. Increased fossil fuel burning
and deforestation are widely believed to cause the climate changes
we are witnessing today, There is an ever faster loss of bio-diversity.
Only education and raised standards of living can halt this gadarene
rush.
And
that brings us back to money. If developed governments cannot muster
the political will to raise the required sums in taxes, where is
it to come from? Enter the Tobin Tax. First proposed in1978 by US
Nobel Prize winner James Tobin, the tax is a levy on financial transactions.
The argument in favour is simple and compelling. Vast sums of money
are traded around the world on a day to day basis - over two trillion
dollars at the last count. This money is not traded for any useful
purpose other than to make profit out of small changes in its price.
Some people make vast fortunes: George Soros, the billionaire financier,
is estimated by some to have earned over £650 million in 1992
by speculating against the pound.
But
betting against currency movements on this scale can cause vast
disruption to markets. The Asian financial collapse in1997-1999,
which threw millions out of work and into poverty, was largely caused
by financial speculation. A few financiers and banks profited but
their money came from a general impoverishment of the population.
James
Tobin's proposed tax would have the effect of dampening down this
speculation. Levied at the rate of 0.25 per cent, a bet against
a currency of a million dollars would cost $2,500 - sufficient perhaps
to make speculators think twice about their actions. A more stable
financial system would be in the overwhelming interest of all trading
businesses as well as world development more generally.
But
it is the revenues that a Tobin tax would generate that make it
really appealing. One estimate suggests a yield of $250 billion.
At that rate the British charity War on Want estimate that the revenue
could pay off all poor nation debts within eight months. At last
here is a source of revenue that would really make a difference.
Until
now the groups that have been campaigning for the introduction of
the Tobin tax have had an uphill struggle. Governments have been
opposed to anything that restricted capital flows or interfered
with markets. Nevertheless support has been growing throughout the
world: group after group has been set up to campaign for its introduction.
They
argue that as financial trading becomes more centralised - over
two thirds of all transactions are handled in London, New York or
Tokyo - and with increasing co-ordination of strategy through bodies
such as the G8, many of the obstacles to implementing the Tobin
Tax, such as traders moving offshore, are being removed. Above all
it could provide those governments with a way of achieving the impossible,
meeting their Millennium pledges without raising domestic taxes.
Is
it all a pipe dream? Well, one person who does not think so is George
Soros himself. Last weekend he was reported to have called the Tobin
Tax "a very good idea" even though admitting it would
make his personal operations harder. And when George Soros speaks,
governments around the world take notice.
More
information on the Tobin Tax can be found at
Association for the Taxation
of financial Transactions for the Aid of Citizens
Tobin Tax Initiative
The international Tobin Tax
campaign
Halifax
Initiative's Capital Controls Campaign
Feasibility
of the Tobin Tax By Rodney Schmidt, International Economic Analysts
(Canadian Department of Finance)
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