Journal Article

IDS Bulletin Vol. 42 Nos. 5

Tackling Instability in Financial Markets with a Panic Tax

Published on 1 September 2011

The motivation for much recent debate on introducing a financial transaction or ‘Tobin’ Tax is to generate revenues for public goods – this is the main aim of the ‘Robin Hood Tax’ campaign. But James Tobin first proposed his idea in order to enhance market stability.

The evidence suggests that a Tobin Tax might not reduce instability. However, a Panic Tax – a simple mechanism to tax panic rather than trade – could promote stability by dampening crashes and booms and providing policy space for more orderly adjustments in the financial markets.

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This article comes from the IDS Bulletin 42.5 (2011) Tackling Instability in Financial Markets with a Panic Tax

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McCulloch, N. (2011) Tackling Instability in Financial Markets with a Panic Tax. IDS Bulletin 42(5): 109-113

Authors

Neil McCulloch

Honorary Associate

Publication details

published by
IDS
authors
McCulloch, Neil
doi
10.1111/j.1759-5436.2011.00261.x

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