Not very likely... 

I follow those telecom/ICT policy discussions and the current hornet's nest
is around the possibility of putting in place mechanisms to allow for sender
pay systems (Google paying something to the folks who are carrying their
billion or so messages a day/hour/minute (?)... which to my mind is a major
problem since 90% of the traffic (and revenue/benefits) go to a relatively
small number of companies/countries while the costs (for providing the
infrastructure) are rather more equitably :) distributed...

Needless to say the reaction is rather as though someone was attempting to
abolish Christmas (which I guess in a sense they are :)

It will not pass--or if it does it will be over the dead bodies of the US,
Google, Amazon, Facebook, Apple and uncle Tom digerati and all.

M

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Sally Lerner
Sent: Wednesday, October 10, 2012 7:02 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Futurework] FW: Eleven Euro States Back Financial Transaction Tax

Bit tax next...?
________________________________________
From: Portside Moderator [[email protected]]
Sent: Tuesday, October 09, 2012 9:55 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Eleven Euro States Back Financial Transaction Tax

Eleven euro states back financial transaction tax

By John O'Donnell and Harry Papachristou

October 9, 2012
Reuters

http://www.reuters.com/assets/print?aid=USBRE8980UC20121009

LUXEMBOURG/ATHENS (Reuters) - Eleven euro zone countries agreed on Tuesday
to press ahead with a disputed tax on financial transactions aimed at making
traders share the cost of fixing a crisis that has rocked the single
currency area.

The initiative, pushed hard by Germany and France but strongly opposed by
Britain, Sweden and other proponents of free markets, gained critical mass
at a European Union finance ministers' meeting in Luxembourg, when more than
the required nine states agreed to use a treaty provision to launch the tax.

Commonly known as a "Tobin tax" after Nobel-prize winning U.S. economist
James Tobin proposed one in 1972 as a way of reducing financial market
volatility, it has become a political symbol of a widespread desire to make
banks, hedge funds and high-frequency traders pay towards a wrenching debt
clean-up.

"This is a small step for 11 countries but a giant leap for Europe,"
Austrian Deputy Finance Minister Andreas Schieder said. "The way is now
clear for a just contribution from the banking and financial sector for
financing the burdens of the crisis."

The deal raised the prospect of a pioneer group of European states for the
first time launching a joint tax without the unanimous backing of the
27-nation bloc, a move that may fragment the Union's single market for
financial services.

To read more, go to
http://www.reuters.com/assets/print?aid=USBRE8980UC20121009

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