How about a tax on stock sales?

Published 10:00 am Monday, June 13, 2011

Some members of Congress are proposing a tax on stock transactions. Such a tax would have very little impact on most of those buying and selling stocks because of proposed tax limitations on ordinary transactions.

A stock transactions tax would incur extra costs mostly to those who are speculating by perpetually buying and selling the same stocks multiple times a day. It’s what’s known as “churning.” Those engaged in that practice usually turn a small profit on each transaction, but make many millions on sheer weight of trading volume. I fail to see how churning benefits anyone but the speculators.

Even though a stock transactions tax, as has been proposed, would be 0.0025 percent, it would have negligible effect on most investors. It’s estimated that a stock transactions tax would generate about $50 to $100 billion a year in tax revenue — no small piece of change!

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It would be nice to see such additional revenue go toward payment of our national debt instead of into the pockets of Wall Street speculators.

Paul G. Jaehnert

Vadnais Heights