A securities turnover excise tax (STET ) is a small tax on every stock, swap, derivative, or other trade. It has been levied historically in the United States and has been proposed more recently as a way to reduce speculation in financial markets.
History
In the United States, the STET was used to fund the Spanish–American War .[ 1]
Re-instatement of the STET was briefly proposed in 1990 as a part of US deficit reduction measures.[ 2]
Advocacy
John Maynard Keynes , in The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money suggested that an excise tax on transactions and trades would discourage speculation in the stock market.[ 3] [ 4]
In 1934, muckraking journalist and novelist Upton Sinclair ran for Governor of California on the End Poverty in California plan . The fourth plank of the plan called for the repeal of the state's sales tax and imposition of "a tax on stock transfers at the rate of 4 cents per share."[ 5]
The STET was a major plank of the 2008 platform of American presidential candidate Ralph Nader ,[ 6] and that same year was proposed by Oregon Congressman Peter DeFazio as a means to pay for the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 .[ 7]
See also
References