A House bill still being drafted aims to raise $150 billion each year to pay for new jobs.
Under a bill being drafted by Democratic Reps. Peter DeFazio (Ore.) and Ed Perlmutter (Colo.), the sale and purchase of financial instruments such as stocks, options, derivatives and futures would face a 0.25 percent tax.
The bill, a copy of which was obtained by The Hill, is titled the “Let Wall Street Pay for the Restoration of Main Street Act of 2009.”
Read it all. My response to this horrible idea was posted in earlier comments below:
[The reason this is such a bad idea] has to do with behavioral economics. This kind of a tax changes the playing field as a result of which all sorts of people and participants will change their behavior. ALL of these behavioral changes have to be taken into consideration in order to show the overall tax revenue implications of such a proposal.
If you understand the way markets work, and especially what has happened with the technological and information revolutions since the 1980’s, and that an entire culture and its related multiple additional subcultures have arisen all around the markets as individuals have participated in many ways as never before, then you can see that the collateral damage will be MASSIVE. This MASSIVE change will have significant tax implications which almost all advocates do not even think of, much less mention. The question is the OVERALL tax revenue implications of the proposal given all of the subsequent changes it will cause.
The result will be much less corporate revenue, less individual revenue, job loss, small business loss, website and pay site implications, computer, phone and internet implications, and the list gets very long very quickly. All of those additional changes will result in more revenue loss for the government.
This has nothing to do with supply side economics, John, nor with taxes in general or people paying their fair share. What it does have to do with is the obliteration of the democratization of the markets which has come in new ways in the last few decades.
This needs considerable computer modeling before even being considered.