FINANCIAL TRANSACTION TAXATION IN AGENT-BASED SIMULATION
Authored by Roman Sperka, Irena Szarowska
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.15240/tul/001/2016-2-012
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Mathematical description
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Abstract
The aim of this paper is to investigate the impact of financial
transaction taxes (FTTs) on the stability of financial markets. This
paper presents an agent-based financial market model and simulations in
which agents follow technical and fundamental trading rules to determine
their speculative investment positions. The model developed by
Westerhoff (2009) was chosen for implementation and was extended by FTT
and arising transaction costs. Because FTTs may be defined in various
ways, this paper defines assets as tax objects. The model includes
direct interactions between speculators, which may lead them to decide
to change their trading behavior and addresses a technical and a
fundamental strategy of market participants. The results suggest that
the modified model has a tendency to stabilize itself in the long term
if fundamental trading rules outweigh the technical trading method. This
model could be used when bubbles and crashes occur in financial markets.
Asset prices would be stabilized because their value targets near the
fundamental value and volatility would also be minimized. Setting FTTs
at a low rate for market stabilization is important. If FTTs and
consequent transaction costs are too high, then the financial system
will destabilize and prices will grow without limit. The model described
in this paper explores dependence market stability to the extent of
FTTs. However, the model should not be interpreted as a model only for
the introduction of FTT, but as a general model of transaction costs'
influence on the financial market.
Tags
Market
Chaos
Model