In August, New York State Assemblymember Steck convened a public event consisting of experts to discuss New York State’s Stock Transfer Tax. The panel included: Joseph Stiglitz, a Nobel Prize Nobel prize winning economist, former chief economist of the World Bank, Professor at Columbia University; Robert Pollin, Professor of Economics at University of Massachusetts, author of a study on the STT commissioned by the New York State Assembly; James Henry, Former Chief Economist at McKinsey & Co., Global Justice Fellow at Yale University, Senior Advisor to the Tax Justice Network; and, Zephyr Teachout, Professor of Law at Fordham University. The panel concluded that New York State is justified to retain the revenues from the tax for both financial and economic fairness grounds. This fact sheet highlights their comments.
Video of the event can be accessed here.
Myth 1: If the Tax is collected, Wall Street will leave the state
Myth 2: Collecting the Stock Transfer Tax will financially harm the state’s pension funds
Myth 3: The NYSE can switch to “the cloud” to electronically evade the tax
Enacted in 1905, New York State’s stock transfer tax (STT) is an excise tax levied on stock trades. The STT taxes each sale of stock worth over $20 at 5 cents.2 While this small fee amounts to a tiny cost on each transaction for investors, the revenue gains for New York State would be tremendous. Some estimate the tax, if fully collected, could raise billions of dollars annually in new revenue. Since it has been fully and automatically rebated to Wall Street since 1981, New York State has lost billions in revenue. Just in the past 10 years, New York State rebated back well over $100 billion.3 Though the tax collected on an average NADAQ trade would be only $8.80 (lower than under the method used in Hong Kong), it is the volume and frequency of trades that generates the revenues.
For most investors, this is an unseen tax -even if it were collected. Most people who have investments generally are not buying and selling stocks with great frequency. Wall Street speculators, on the other hand, seek to jump in and out of investments at a rapid pace and those would be the people who would pay the vast bulk of the tax.
There are already places with sophisticated stock markets that have a stock transfer tax in place as a revenue stream. Countries like the United Kingdom, Switzerland, and Taiwan all have financial transaction taxes on the books. Hong Kong, a city considered to have the freest economy in the world, has a 0.1% tax on financial transactions with no significant impact on its economy aside from a lack of high-frequency trading.4
Some advocates want to tax bonds and derivatives. This was prompted by a concern that STT would not raise enough money, due to inaccurate reporting by Wall Street firms. See footnote 3. Since NY has 50% of all trading in the world, we do not need to tax other securities to raise massive revenue. Further, taxing stock trades will not result in purchasers buying bonds and derivatives instead of stocks. As Goldman Sachs has said, taxing trades at an exceedingly low rate does not influence investor behavior. Those who are interested in the benefits of equities will buy equities; those who are interested in greater security provided by bonds will buy bonds; those who interested in the risks of derivatives will purchase derivatives. Further, bonds and derivatives are future oriented, so taxing them properly is more complex. They properly should be valued to be taxed. This violates the principle of keeping it simple.
A recent Zogby poll found that a majority of New Yorkers want to revive the Stock Transfer Tax and support increases to over 60% when the money is dedicated to infrastructure as the Steck/Sanders bill does. Even 77% of workers in the financial industry supported reviving the tax.5 New York State infrastructure has a C- rating and is badly in need of improvement.6 Further STT will inject billions of dollars into the economy of Upstate NY which has been in decline.
Why firms/computers will not move to New Jersey (or elsewhere) to avoid STT
Why the Stock Transfer Tax (STT) does not affect your pension
Shake Off the Fever Dream
Quick Facts about the Stock Transfer Tax
Wall Street can spare a nickel-New York should reinstate the Stock Transfer Tax By TOM ALLON DECEMBER 21, 2020
Could a Tax on Stock Trading Help New York Fill Its Massive Budget Hole? -October 13, 2020 | by Lee Harris City and State NY
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