Transactions tax is expected to be charged at a rate
of one euro for every 1,000 Euros of shares traded
EU finance ministers have given the green light for
11 eurozone members, including France and Germany, to ready a new tax on financial
transactions.
The approval under "enhanced co-operation"
rules allows the smaller group to pioneer the tax.
Governments previously failed to agree to impose the
tax across the entire 27-member EU or 17-member eurozone.
The UK and 15 other EU members will not introduce
the tax, which is intended to discourage speculative trading.
Some European governments have blamed speculators
and excessive trading for exaggerating the swings in financial markets during
the 2008 crash and the recent eurozone crisis.
"It is a milestone for EU tax policy, as it
paves the way for more ambitious member states to progress on a tax file, even
when unanimity could not be achieved," said Algirdas Semeta, the European
Commissioner for tax.
"Those who want to move ahead, and who
appreciate the merits of working more closely on taxation at EU level, can do
so.
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