2017
DOI: 10.1093/ser/mwx039
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Taxing stock transfers in the first golden age of financial capitalism: political salience and the limits on the power of finance

Abstract: The current debate about taxing financial transactions is often presented as a brand new one. It is not. At the turn of the 19th century, a similar tax was debated in France and the US Financial actors fought the tax mightily. Those actors were very powerful. Yet, they lost. A tax on stock transfers (STT) was established. Why? Through a comparative analysis of France and the State of New York, this article argues that the tax was adopted because politicians interested in capitalizing on public discontent endea… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Political pressure is not necessarily passively applied but can be instrumentalized by policy entrepreneurs to achieve their own political goals (Massoc 2019). As is developed in the next section, the discursive convergence on the criticismof the notion of market neutrality resulted from politicization dynamics: MEPs brought political salience on the issue of market neutrality and this, in turn, put enough pressure on central bankers to force them to question, and eventually abandon, one of their main arguments previously used to justify the status quo.…”
Section: Politicization Dynamicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Political pressure is not necessarily passively applied but can be instrumentalized by policy entrepreneurs to achieve their own political goals (Massoc 2019). As is developed in the next section, the discursive convergence on the criticismof the notion of market neutrality resulted from politicization dynamics: MEPs brought political salience on the issue of market neutrality and this, in turn, put enough pressure on central bankers to force them to question, and eventually abandon, one of their main arguments previously used to justify the status quo.…”
Section: Politicization Dynamicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Where those with fewer economic resources could win was on issues where they could attract public attention and public concern. 27 And the mechanism for doing that was to draw media coverage to those issues.…”
Section: Challenges To the Responsiveness Of Democracymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It shows that the financial sector's high levels of unity and organisation often bring favourable political outcomes (Pagliari and Young, 2016;Young and Pagliari, 2017). Since low issue salience and 'quiet' politics generally benefits business interests (Culpepper, 2010;Massoc, 2017;), civil society-based advocacy is most effective when it succeeds in making policy issues salient and 'noisy' -as it did, in some areas of financial policy, in the aftermath of the global financial crisis (Ziegler and Woolley, 2016;Baker and Wigan, 2017;Kastner, 2018). The second approach emphasises the dependence of the state on private investment to generate growth and employment, and the resulting structural power of business in general, and of finance in particular (Lindblom, 1977;Culpepper, 2015;Woll, 2016).…”
Section: Market-based Banking and The Infrastructural Power Of Financementioning
confidence: 99%