Taxing financial transactions in fundamentally heterogeneous markets
Authored by Edoardo Gaffeo, Massimo Molinari
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.econmod.2017.04.003
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Abstract
The recent global financial crisis has revived a long-standing debate on
the desirability and feasibility of taxing financial activities to curb
speculation and promote price stability. In this paper we apply
agent-based computational techniques to explore this issue in a
multi-market environment in which the processes driving the fundamental
value of the securities traded in different jurisdictions are
heterogeneous. A natural exemplification is to assume that security
dealers have the opportunity to submit orders by choosing among stock
markets at different stages of development. We argue that the proper
policy objective to be pursued is not volatility in itself but price
efficiency, that is, the volatility in excess of the discounted stream
of subsequent dividends. In this case, a global coordination of tax
rates is incentive-compatible, given that it minimizes the distortion
associated with speculative trading, on the one hand, and it ensures
that the loss of trading volume is lower if compared to the case of
unilateral taxation on the other. Notwithstanding a fundamental
heterogeneity of the markets involved, the optimal tax rate turns out to
be symmetric provided that fundamental value trajectories are positively
correlated.
Tags
Agent-based models
Tobin tax
Policy
Volatility
information
Financial transaction tax
Stock
Costs
Heterogeneous traders
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