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Treasury chief: UK rules out US-style bank tax

Sat Jan 16, 2010 5:48 AM EST
business, barack-obama, eu, britain, tax, bank, alistair-darling
Associated Press

President Barack Obama, second from right, leaves the podium at the White House in Washington, Thursday, Jan. 14, 2010, with, from left, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, National Economic Council Director Larry Summers, and Budget Director Peter Orszag, after he announced a new fee on big banks to recover up to $120 billion in taxpayers' money used to prop up corporations during the economic crisis. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

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LONDON — Britain will not copy President Barack Obama's tax on banks that were bailed out by the taxpayer, Treasury chief Alistair Darling said in an interview published Saturday.

Obama is proposing a tax of 0.15 percent on the liabilities of large financial institutions in a bid to recoup at least $90 billion spent rescuing the sector from collapse.

Darling told The Scotsman newspaper that Britain was not considering a similar plan.

"No, we are not," he was quoted as saying. "The Americans are doing something different."

Instead, Britain is imposing one-off 50 percent levy on bank bonuses above 25,000 pounds ($40,700). It has also introduced a new 50 percent tax rate for top earners.

The British government took stakes in the banks it bailed out, forking out some 850 billion pounds in taxpayer money, substantially more than the cost of U.S. intervention. Darling said Britain would recoup the money by selling those stakes at the right time — though he acknowledged that was "some years" away.

On Friday, London Mayor Boris Johnson warned that thousands of high-earning bankers would flee London because of the government's tax on bonuses. New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg said Obama's tax plan poses a similar threat to Wall Street.

© 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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  • Public Discussion (2)
Charles of Bassett Breath

If ever a benchmark as evidence of the new Marxist Amercan state of the uniion. If the Brits can not find their way to a tax, and we can...unbelievable.

    Reply#1 - Sat Jan 16, 2010 7:45 AM EST
    z0rr0

    VP Joe Biden sent me an mass email. No, he doesn't send me personal mail, I don't count for that much. It was on the topic of imposing bank fees, and included this phrase: "..when I see reports of massive profits and obscene bonuses at some of the very firms who owe their continued existence to the American people...We want our money back, and we're going to get it."

    Why do we need to be toyed with? Organizations do not profit, and do not get bonuses. When organizations, like the banks, get hit with a fee, they obviously pass it on the customers. That's us. We Americans are not too stupid to understand that.

    If Joe Biden and the Administration want to deal with the obscene profits, let them do the obvious: follow the money! The profits and the bonuses are going to perhaps several thousand individuals, and the Administration and the IRS knows them by name. Go after them to reclaim our tax dollars. Don't make us pay twice, and then have us believe you have recouped our money!

    Of course, we know that this Administration killed House bill which would have taxed the individuals who got obscene bonuses. So doing the obvious may not be obvious to Geithner and company. Maybe that's why we have to be toyed with, misdirected, confused and placated with proposals like the bank fees?

    The thought of "thousands of high-earning bankers would flee" the US is actually quite appealing. They have been global citizens for a long time, and have no allegance to America anyway.

      Reply#2 - Sat Jan 16, 2010 12:58 PM EST
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