The Robin Hood Tax is a proposed new tax on
financial transactions, which could generate the funds to pay for the social
costs of the economic crisis, fight global poverty, and fund global public goods
such as health care and to mitigate and adapt to the impacts of climate change.
This new tax, while as low as 0.05% of
financial transactions, would contribute to greater stability of the financial
system by reducing speculation and excessive liquidity.
The financial sector has caused the current
historic crisis. The exponential growth of the financial sector with a focus on
short-term speculative gain has created a ‘casino economy’. With the bursting of
the most recent bubble, millions of women and men have lost their jobs.
Hundreds of billions of dollars have been
mobilized internationally to save the banks and the financial system. At the
same time, neither the social nor the climate emergency is being addressed with
the political urgency it deserves and with the necessary financial resources to
back it.
Financial services corporations benefited for
decades from the absence of meaningful regulation and are largely responsible
for the crisis. It is time for them to pay their fair share of the costs of
recovery. A Financial Transactions Tax would be the most effective instrument to
secure this.
The establishment of the Robin Hood Tax is a
real way the G8 & G20 Summits could make a long-lasting positive difference to
the economy.
For more information about the Robin Hood
Tax, please visit
http://www.makefinancework.org/
OPSEU to support Robin Hood Tax at G20 rally
June
22, 2010 OPSEU will be handing out free Robin Hood Tax t-shirts to
hundreds of OPSEU members at the G20 rally. Be sure to come early to the
OPSEU station at the north-east of Queen’s Park to get your t-shirt. Show
your support for this important proposal to impose a small tax on financial
transactions which would bring in billions of dollars for much need funding
for the public good.