| Tobin or Not Tobin?
Satya Sivaraman
It is a tax whose time may have finally come and one that a significant
portion of the anti-globalisation movement swears by. And yet the
proposal for a Tobin Tax, which would be levied on global financial
transactions, continues to generate strong debate - not so much
over its practicability as over its real effectiveness in curbing
the various ills associated with globalisation today.
While some believe that the Tobin Tax is a measure that has the
best chance of widespread approval and hence early implementation
others feel that by projecting the tax as a 'magic bullet' of sorts,
a wide number of other measures that are needed to curb speculative
capital are being neglected. Various speakers at a WSF seminar on
Financial Capital
Controls agreed that the Tobin Tax, though urgent and necessary,
may not be enough on its own to prevent an Argentina from happening
again.
Leading the charge for implementation of the Tobin Tax was Dominique
Plihon, French economist and leading member of the Association for
the Taxation of Financial Transactions for the Aid of Citizens (ATTAC).
Pointing to the way the Tobin tax, in just the past few years, has
made strong inroads into French and European political debate, he
said that the tax was 'not a panacea' but its implementation will
be a very important first step in combating the problems created
worldwide by neo-liberal economic policies.
Within the past few years ATTAC and other organisations supporting
the Tobin Tax have managed to get politicians across the world,
particularly in Europe and Canada, to bring the measure up for serious
debate and push for its immediate implementation.
The Tobin Tax is named after Nobel Prize-winning economist James
Tobin, who in 1972 proposed that a small worldwide tariff, of less
than half of one percent, be levied by all major countries on foreign-exchange
transactions in order to 'throw some sand in the wheels' of speculative
capital flows. Investors play the bond and currency markets, profiting
from the minute-to-minute, hourly or daily fluctuations in prices
around the world. Over 1.5 trillion dollars is traded every day,
95 percent of which is bet on whether currency values and interest
rates will rise or fall. Traders make money either way and they
thrive when markets are highly unstable, as they were in Southeast
Asia in 1997 and most recently in Argentina.
The Tobin Tax is expected to reduce or eliminate the incentive
to speculate and help stabilise exchange rates by reducing the volume
of speculation. And it is set deliberately low so as not to have
an adverse effect on trade in goods and services or long-term investments.
'The real challenge today is to explain the Tobin Tax to workers
and ordinary people and point out the benefits they will have from
regulating financial capital flows,' said Jayati Ghosh, a development
economist from India and also a panellist at yesterday's seminar
on Financial Capital Controls.
However, according to Ghosh the Tobin Tax should not be seen as
the only measure possible or desirable for curbing the problem of
speculative money flowing out devastated economies, ranging from
Thailand to Argentina. Among other measures, discussed by panellists
at the WSF seminar, were a flat tax of up to 20 percent on multinational
profits to be diverted for poverty alleviation, a tax as well as
a minimum lock-in period for foreign capital, tighter controls over
bank credit to companies and outflow of foreign exchange from national
economies.
While many of these measures, like the lock-in period for foreign
investment, are already being implemented in countries such as Chile
and Malaysia, Ghosh pointed out there were considerable obstacles
still in the way of making speculative capital flows accountable
to the individual economies they operate in.
Among the biggest problems is the way international financial institutions
such as the International Monetary Fund and World Bank have pushed
neo-liberal policies, favouring free movement of capital, onto the
backs of numerous developing countries, said Gigi Francisco, of
the Development Alternatives with Women for a New Era (DAWN). She
believes regulation of global capital will remain difficult because
developing country governments are under tremendous pressure to
keep the doors of their economies open.
As Ghosh points out, ultimately the biggest problem is not economic,
but political in nature because currently global power relations
are totally skewed in favour of a few rich countries that are pushing
neo-liberal policies worldwide. Tinkering with the global financial
system, she says, cannot be a substitute for a real redistribution
of global wealth and power.
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