New Bill to Tax Stock Market Could Devastate Ordinary Savings and Retirement (2024)

A new tax proposal in Congress aims to stick it to the rich.But if passed, it could devastate the U.S. financial system and ruin the valueof ordinary Americans’ retirement accounts.

The proposal, introduced by a team of Democrats in the Houseand Senate, would assess a penalty each time someone sells a stock, bond, orother financial instrument. It would tax each of the roughly 10billion U.S. equity market trades each year, among othertransactions.

The goal, presumably, is to hit the rich. But the stockmarket is not just a tool for the wealthy.

Some of the largest shareholders and beneficiaries of our modern financial system are pension funds for public-sector employees and private retirement account holders. Firefighters, teachers, university endowments, and private retirement savings all benefit from sophisticated equity markets. Many employers issue short-term debt to cover payroll and young start-ups sell securities to fund their growth.

The stock market may seem opaque to the average American,but they still benefit from it through new jobs, advances in productivity, andincreases in retirement and other invested savings.

This proposalwould handicap markets for U.S. saving and investment. It would levy a tax of0.1 percent on the value of every stock, bond, and derivative transaction inthe U.S. or made by a U.S. resident.

Depending on the purveyor you listen to, this new tax couldmake the stock market fairer and less volatile. The tax would stop the dreaded practiceof high-frequency trading, whereby large volumes of trades are made quickly byalgorithm. Its backers also project that it would raise a sizable chunk of revenuethat purportedly would be paid by the “rich.”

But a financial transactions tax fails to meet each of these goals. It would increase rather than decrease market volatility; it would hurt digital traders, who benefit the market; it would not raise as much revenue as projected; and the tax would ultimately be paid by American savers through lower investment returns and fewer economic opportunities.

A financial transaction tax is not a new idea. The Congressional Budget Office regularly includes it in its yearly list of budget options. Its report notes, however, that the tax could “have a number of negative effects on the economy stemming from its effects on asset prices, the cost of capital for firms, and the frequency of trading.”

These concerns bear out in the real world, too. Evidence from France’s experiment with a transactions tax in 2012 shows that it lowers trading volumes and reduces market liquidity, which hurts market quality.

Fewer trades mean it is harder to buy and sell stock, andmarkets operate less efficiently. Inefficient markets hurt everyone. Theytranslate into fewer new jobs and less productive investment.

Italy also tried a transactions tax. There, it increased market volatility.

The transactions tax is designed to cut out short-term and speculativetraders who trade for small gains by increasing cost of the trade. But withoutthese participants, market prices are less accurate, leading to more frequent andlarger price swings. This is borne out in a 2015 study that shows how the taxwould indeed increasethe likelihood of boom-bust cycles and exacerbate overall returnvolatility.

In addition, University of California, Berkeley professor Maria Coelhofound that financial transactions taxes are “poor instruments” for fixing themarket problems identified by advocates.

As written, the bill is so expansive that it would likelytax short-term, non-exchange traded commercial paper that is used to cover short-termbusiness obligations, like payroll. So a transactions tax could make payingworkers more expensive.

The tax would also increase costs for small businesses andstart-ups trying to raise funds. A start-up that sells $50 million insecurities would now owe a $50,000 tax—not a trivial sum.

But most of all, the tax would hurt ordinary American savers.

In the United Kingdom, it was estimated in the1980s that cutting the limited financial transactions tax rate “from 2 percentto 1 percent would have led to a 10 percent rise in share prices.” To theextent there is a transactions tax, stock values will fall.

A transactions tax would therefore decrease the stock of wealthfor any American who has investments. Private retirement accounts and pensionplans could be hurt the most.

Consider a retirement account: a $300,000 self-directed IRAequities portfolio turning over once every year. Just a 0.1 percent tax wouldresult in additional costs of $300 annually. This may sound minimal, but a $300annual investment growing at 7 percent amounts to more than $20,000 after 25years.

Perhaps most fundamentally, the tax would impose its largesteffective rate on marginal investments—those investments that just barely makea profit. These are the more common type of investments , even though high-returnprojects are also important.

Forinstance, under the proposed tax, a block of 1,000 shares of a $25stock that is sold for $25.01 would face a 250 percent tax rate on the profitmade from the sale. By design, these marginal investments are the type thatwould be most harmed by a transactions tax. The higher the tax rate, the largerthe harm.

Despite claims that a new tax would have little effect, historyshows that traders respond markedly to new transactions taxes. Thismeans such proposals raise “significantly lower revenues than projected,” as Coelhofound in Italy and France.

It is unlikely the new tax would raise anything close to the$777 billion over 10 years that proponents hope for.

It is clear that financial transactions taxes are a poorlydesigned policy for achieving their proponents’ stated goals. But even if itwere the best way to raise revenue, we should question whether maximizingrevenue is even a proper goal for governments to have as a matter of policy.

The government class will always have an insatiable desire to tax and spend at ever higher levels, which means it will search for new and innovative ways to raise revenue. Governments, like most monopolies, are prone to waste and inefficiency.

A better course of action is for Washington to let people ofall income levels keep more of the money they earn—to spend, save, and invest howthey see fit for themselves, their family, and their local communities.

Washington already has plenty of ways to tax Americans—richand poor alike. Adding a new tax to the financial system is not the wayforward—especially when it will hurt American workers, students, and retireesthe most.

New Bill to Tax Stock Market Could Devastate Ordinary Savings and Retirement (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Neely Ledner

Last Updated:

Views: 6129

Rating: 4.1 / 5 (42 voted)

Reviews: 89% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Neely Ledner

Birthday: 1998-06-09

Address: 443 Barrows Terrace, New Jodyberg, CO 57462-5329

Phone: +2433516856029

Job: Central Legal Facilitator

Hobby: Backpacking, Jogging, Magic, Driving, Macrame, Embroidery, Foraging

Introduction: My name is Neely Ledner, I am a bright, determined, beautiful, adventurous, adventurous, spotless, calm person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.