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ARCHIVE
The Extraordinarily Extraterritorial Proposal to Tax Global Financial Transactions
By Keith Lawson
April 10, 2013
The financial transaction tax (FTT) being considered by several European countries would have an extraordinary extraterritorial effect. The tax would crash across borders. All investors would be hit. The economic link triggering this tax, as explained below, need be no thicker than a blade of grass.
Background: FTT Rejection and Lessons from the Swedish FTT Debacle
The extraterritorial features of the European FTT proposal are the direct result of two rejections—first by the Group of 20 and then by the European Union—of proposals for a global, and then an EU-wide, FTT. Concerns exist that, absent a broadly applicable tax, financial transactions will migrate from countries adopting the tax to ones (such as the United States and the United Kingdom) that steadfastly refuse to tax these transactions.
The European Commission, which crafted the proposal being considered by only a minority of EU member states, clearly learned from the Swedish experience. Specifically, Sweden decimated its financial markets by enacting an FTT in 1984, increasing the tax rate in 1986 and again in 1987, and then extending the tax to bonds in 1989. Following an 85 percent decline in trading in long-term bonds and a migration of half of all trading in Swedish stocks to non-Swedish markets (such as London), the tax was modified in 1990 and repealed in 1991.
The Commission was determined to prevent European countries adopting the Commission’s proposal from suffering Sweden’s fate. The only way to prevent that fate, however, is to advance a tax that applies beyond the adopting countries’ borders. To achieve the desired end, the Commission has proposed an extraterritorial tax that applies based on either the country in which a financial instrument or product is treated as issued (the issuance principle) or the country in which the investor is treated as residing (the residence principle).
Adding to the proposal’s extraordinary breadth, the tax applies to each transfer of a security—even if a financial intermediary is acting as a market maker and purchasing a security for sale to a customer. Without a market maker exception, a common feature of other FTTs, the tax cascades through each step in a transaction. The extraterritorial impact of the European proposal is compounded by this cascading effect.
Yet, some proponents of the European FTT assert that the proposal has no extraterritorial effect because an “economic link” must exist between the transaction and the country asserting the tax. This denial of the proposal’s breadth is striking. Let’s look at the facts.
Taxation Based upon Issuance
The European proposal would tax financial institutions on transactions involving most financial instruments (including stocks and bonds) and structured products that are “issued within” any participating member state. The tax would apply regardless of the country in which the instrument or product trades.
The proposed FTT would have broad extraterritorial effect. The FTT would apply, for example, to:
- the sale on the Tokyo Stock Exchange of the shares of a German company,
- a secondary market purchase in Singapore of Italian government bonds, and
- the sale on the New York Stock Exchange of an American Depositary Receipt (ADR) on a French stock.
Existing FTTs have little, if any, extraterritorial effect. Typically, these taxes apply only to financial institutions operating within the taxing country or only to trades on local exchanges. As the European Commission has noted, the UK stamp duty is somewhat broader in that it does apply, outside of the United Kingdom, to sales of shares in a UK company. The stamp duty nevertheless is quite limited in that it does not apply to transactions in the United Kingdom of non-UK stocks; likewise, it does not apply to transactions anywhere in the world involving bonds or contracts for difference (a derivative similar to an ADR).
In sum, under the issuance principle, the European proposal is exponentially more extraterritorial than existing FTTs. Even the UK stamp duty is about as similar to the European proposal as a single blade of grass is to Wimbledon’s Centre Court.
Taxation Based upon Residence
The European proposal also would tax financial institutions on covered transactions involving any person (including an individual) “established” in a participating member state. The tax would apply regardless of the country in which the transaction occurs.
The residence principle leads to greater extraterritorial effect than the issuance principle. Not surprisingly, a financial institution is treated as established in a participating member state if it is authorized to act within that state or has a branch within that state. Absolutely extraordinarily, however, a financial institution also is treated as established in a participating member if its counterparty is so established. Individuals are treated as “established” in the country of their “permanent address.”
To illustrate how thin a link is sufficient under the proposal to impose the FTT outside of Europe, consider a U.S. fund with an individual shareholder who lives in the United States but who has a permanent address in Belgium. Under the proposal, the U.S. fund is treated as established in Belgium for purposes of any transaction involving that shareholder. Similarly, an Australian fund buying a Peruvian stock from an Austrian broker would be treated as established in Austria (rather than Australia) for purposes of the Peruvian stock sale.
No country attempts to apply its FTT in this manner. Among other reasons, no mechanism exists for collecting a tax so far from home from parties with no effective connection to the taxing state.
Contrary to assertions made by some, the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) rules enacted by the United States are not precedential. Unlike the European proposal, which would require tax to be collected wherever in the world a transaction occurs (and then remitted to the country in which the institution is deemed to be established), FATCA requires U.S. withholding agents to collect tax only on payments made in the United States to institutions that do not agree to comply with FATCA.
To return to the blades of grass analogy, given the added extraterritorial breadth of the residence principle, comparing existing FTTs to the European proposal is like comparing a single blade of grass to London’s Hyde Park. The extraordinarily extraterritorial effect of this proposal simply cannot be denied.
Learn more about FTTs at our resource center.
Keith Lawson is senior counsel, tax law for ICI and ICI Global.
TOPICS: TaxesICI Global
Individual Investors Will Be Harmed by Financial Transaction Taxes
By Keith Lawson
March 27, 2013
A fundamental tenet of the argument for a financial transaction taxes (FTTs) is that individuals would not be harmed.
TOPICS: TaxesICI Global
Securities Lending and Repos: FSB Intrudes on Areas Best Left to National Regulators, Market Forces
By Robert C. Grohowski and Giles Swan
January 17, 2013
The Financial Stability Board (FSB), the international body established by the G20 to promote coordination among authorities responsible for financial stability, has made a number of recommendations toward creating a global policy framework for the securities lending and repurchase agreement (repo) markets.
TOPICS: ICI GlobalFund Regulation
2013 Regulatory Challenges and Trends Facing Global Funds
By Dan Waters
December 28, 2012
ICI Global launched last autumn with 12 members and a mission to serve as a voice for global investment funds and their investors.
TOPICS: ICI Global
One Step Forward for Cross-Border OTC Derivative Regulatory Reform
By Giles Swan
December 6, 2012
International regulators recently published a statement updating the discussions amongst the main global financial centers about the framework that should regulate cross-border over-the-counter (OTC) derivative transactions.
TOPICS: Financial MarketsICI Global
Witnessing Asia’s Potential for Asset Managers
By Dan Waters and Giles Swan
December 3, 2012
Since our launch just over a year ago, ICI Global has made six trips to Asia to meet with regulators, members, and prospective members.
TOPICS: ICI Global
FATCA Must Not Undercut the Advantages That U.S. ETFs Offer Global Investors
By Keith Lawson and Ryan Lovin
November 6, 2012
In recent months, ICI has continued to engage closely with regulators to share our concerns and suggestions for implementing the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA).
TOPICS: TaxesICI Global
More Time Is Needed to Ensure Effective FATCA Implementation
By Keith Lawson
November 6, 2012
On January 1, 2013, various rules implementing the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) begin to take effect.
TOPICS: TaxesICI Global
Sticking to the Facts of Money Market Fund Regulation
By Dan Waters
October 25, 2012
In a recent column, the Evening Standard’s Anthony Hilton includes money market funds as part of a network he suggests forms “an unregulated zone” with “no oversight.”
The Facts and Principles That Must Guide Money Market Fund Reform
By Dan Waters
October 3, 2012
In Madrid this week, the board of the International Organization of Securities Commissions will choose their course of action on money market funds.
TOPICS: ICI GlobalMoney Market FundsFund Regulation
Transparency and Inclusiveness Are Key to Addressing FATCA Challenges
By Keith Lawson
October 3, 2012
U.S. officials, their counterparts overseas, and representatives from the private sector continue to make impressive headway in implementing the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA).
TOPICS: TaxesICI Global
Regulators and Industry Exchange FATCA Insights at ICI and ICI Global Webinar
By Keith Lawson
August 30, 2012
Senior officials from the U.S. Treasury Department and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), along with industry experts, recently engaged in a very informative webinar discussion regarding a model intergovernmental agreement (IGA) for implementing the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA). The model IGA, as discussed in an earlier ICI Viewpoints post, was developed by the Treasury Department with the active cooperation of senior tax officials from France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and the United Kingdom.
TOPICS: TaxesICI Global
How the Model Intergovernmental Agreement Reduces FATCA Burdens
By Keith Lawson
August 1, 2012
The U.S. Treasury Department has made significant progress with its July 26 release of a model intergovernmental agreement (IGA) for implementing the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA). This model IGA—developed with the active cooperation of senior tax officials from France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and the United Kingdom—addresses many of the U.S. and global fund industries’ concerns with the substantial compliance burdens placed by FATCA on funds, their distributors, and their investors. ICI and ICI Global applaud this development and look forward to continuing our dialogue with these governments on the FATCA regulations and the IGAs they craft based on the model.
TOPICS: TaxesICI Global
UCITS V—Significant Changes for European Funds and Fund Managers
By Giles Swan
July 3, 2012
Today the European Commission adopted a proposal for revisions to the Undertakings for Collective Investment in Transferable Securities (UCITS) framework, which governs cross-border retail investment funds in Europe.
TOPICS: ICI GlobalFund RegulationInternational
FATCA’s Challenges for Global Investment Funds
By Keith Lawson
May 30, 2012
The rules proposed to implement the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) pose a number of serious challenges for ICI Global members. ICI Global’s recent comment letter to the U.S. Department of the Treasury and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) made several recommendations on how the FATCA rules should be amended so that ICI Global’s members—regulated funds that are publicly offered to investors in leading jurisdictions worldwide—can overcome these challenges without compromising the tax compliance benefits contemplated by FATCA.
TOPICS: TaxesICI Global
Proposal to Implement Volcker Rule Raises Significant Issues for Regulated Funds Globally
By Dan Waters
February 14, 2012
Congress enacted the provision of the Dodd-Frank Reform Act known as the Volcker Rule to restrict banks from sponsoring and investing in hedge funds (so-called covered funds) and using their own resources to trade for purposes unrelated to serving clients—something known as “proprietary trading.”
TOPICS: ICI GlobalFund RegulationInternational
A New Voice for Global Investment Funds
By Paul Schott Stevens
October 10, 2011
Over the past two decades, the world has witnessed the rise of asset managers as global financial intermediaries. The fund industry has been at the forefront of this movement, vigorously expanding its international reach and offering investors opportunities to diversify and to access new markets.
TOPICS: ICI GlobalInternational
Copyright © 2013 by the Investment Company Institute
