Taxing Banks Fairly

There is no reason to continue to exempt financial services and products from Value Added Tax in the UK, and indeed elsewhere. Its introduction in the UK would help to precipitate the end of the iniquitous and inefficient ‘free banking’ system. Its demise should be enforced by a retail banking and i...

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Main Author: Mullineux, Andy
Format: Journal Article
Published: Elsevier BV * North-Holland 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/46199
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author Mullineux, Andy
author_facet Mullineux, Andy
author_sort Mullineux, Andy
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description There is no reason to continue to exempt financial services and products from Value Added Tax in the UK, and indeed elsewhere. Its introduction in the UK would help to precipitate the end of the iniquitous and inefficient ‘free banking’ system. Its demise should be enforced by a retail banking and insurance utility regulator that would assure that charges to customers reflect costs incurred by banks and thus eliminate the cross-subsidisation underpinning ‘free banking’. Further, the shareholders and senior bondholders of ‘too big to fail’ banks enjoy a guarantee from taxpayers which they are not paying for. This puts them at a competitive advantage in relation to smaller banks and exposes taxpayers to losses in crises. The big banks should thus pay regulatory and fiscal taxes commensurate with the insurance they enjoy and these taxes should be carefully calibrated so as not to overburden domestic banks relative to international competitors. The taxes paid should relate to a bank's risk exposure and the risks a bank poses to the financial system as a whole. The banks should thus contribute proportionately (with other taxpayers) to producing the Public Good, financial stability. The issue of the tax bias caused deductibility of interest, but not dividend payments, as business expense is also explored. To achieve equal treatment of debt and equity, deductibility could be extended to dividends, but the tendency toward over indebtedness might be curbed if tax deductibility of interest was eliminated, perhaps starting with banks!
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-461992017-09-13T15:06:00Z Taxing Banks Fairly Mullineux, Andy Taxation ‘Too big to fail’ Financial stability ‘Free banking’ There is no reason to continue to exempt financial services and products from Value Added Tax in the UK, and indeed elsewhere. Its introduction in the UK would help to precipitate the end of the iniquitous and inefficient ‘free banking’ system. Its demise should be enforced by a retail banking and insurance utility regulator that would assure that charges to customers reflect costs incurred by banks and thus eliminate the cross-subsidisation underpinning ‘free banking’. Further, the shareholders and senior bondholders of ‘too big to fail’ banks enjoy a guarantee from taxpayers which they are not paying for. This puts them at a competitive advantage in relation to smaller banks and exposes taxpayers to losses in crises. The big banks should thus pay regulatory and fiscal taxes commensurate with the insurance they enjoy and these taxes should be carefully calibrated so as not to overburden domestic banks relative to international competitors. The taxes paid should relate to a bank's risk exposure and the risks a bank poses to the financial system as a whole. The banks should thus contribute proportionately (with other taxpayers) to producing the Public Good, financial stability. The issue of the tax bias caused deductibility of interest, but not dividend payments, as business expense is also explored. To achieve equal treatment of debt and equity, deductibility could be extended to dividends, but the tendency toward over indebtedness might be curbed if tax deductibility of interest was eliminated, perhaps starting with banks! 2012 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/46199 10.1016/j.irfa.2012.11.001 Elsevier BV * North-Holland restricted
spellingShingle Taxation
‘Too big to fail’
Financial stability
‘Free banking’
Mullineux, Andy
Taxing Banks Fairly
title Taxing Banks Fairly
title_full Taxing Banks Fairly
title_fullStr Taxing Banks Fairly
title_full_unstemmed Taxing Banks Fairly
title_short Taxing Banks Fairly
title_sort taxing banks fairly
topic Taxation
‘Too big to fail’
Financial stability
‘Free banking’
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/46199