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A tax whose time has come...
Jun 10, 2011 | 481 views | 1 1 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Some members of Congress are proposing a tax on stock transactions. Such a tax would have very little impact on most of those buying and selling stocks because of proposed tax limitations on ordinary transactions.

A stock transactions tax would incur extra costs mostly to those who are speculating by perpetually buying and selling the same stocks multiple times a day. It’s what’s known as ‘churning’. Those engaged in that practice usually turn a small profit on each transaction, but make many millions on sheer weight of trading volume. I fail to see how churning benefits anyone but the speculators.

Even though a stock transactions tax, as has been proposed, would be .0025%, it would have negligible effect on most investors. It’s estimated that a stock transactions tax would generate about $50 to $100 billion dollars a year in tax revenue — no small piece of change!

It would be nice to see such additional revenue go towards payment of our national debt instead of into the pockets of Wall Street speculators.

Paul G. Jaehnert

Vadnais Hts., Minn.
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TonyRobinson
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June 12, 2011
Daytrading or "churning" as you call it is already taxed as every stock transaction costs a price charged by the brokers and those profits get taxed. The profits each stock trader makes gets taxed as well. Why tax even more and reduce the incentives to invest? I personally support replacing all taxes with a national sales tax. The "fairtax" would encourage new business creation, therefore that is the only tax proposal I would ever support.

This new tax would do no good and probably decrease interest in investing.

Big government is the problem not the solution-- Ronald Reagan
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