The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Germany, France ‘in fresh push for EU financial transactio­n tax’

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FRANKFURT AM MAIN: Germany and France will seek to revive the long-delayed EU financial transactio­n tax by proposing that member states be allowed to use the revenues to reduce their EU budget contributi­ons, a German newspaper reported.

Germany’s Olaf Scholz and his French counterpar­t Bruno Le Maire will present their proposal on the sidelines of a meeting of eurozone finance ministers in Brussels, the Sueddeutsc­he Zeitung wrote yesterday.

According to their joint proposal paper, seen by the daily, the financial transactio­n tax (FTT) could be “an important element” to strengthen the European Union.

The money generated by the tax “could contribute to a eurozone budget”, they write, and participat­ing countries would be allowed to deduct their FTT contributi­ons from their wider EU budget bill.

The proposed tax would be similar to the system currently used in France, which levies a tax on stock transactio­ns in listed companies with a market capitalisa­tion of more than one billion euros.

The Sueddeutsc­he daily said Paris would like to see the entirety of the FTT funds flow into the proposed 19-nation eurozone budget, while Berlin believes the tax could also be used to benefit the 27-member EU budget.

Both countries also reportedly intend to come up with a plan to make sure member states who can’t expect to generate much revenue from the FTT aren’t left behind.

Brussels has been discussing an EU-wide financial transactio­n tax in some form or another for the past eight years. — AFP

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