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Bill Gates To G20: Financial Transaction Tax Could Raise Aid For Poorer Nations

Bill Gates G20

First Posted: 09/23/11 05:30 PM ET Updated: 11/23/11 05:12 AM ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A report by Microsoft founder Bill Gates to Group of 20 ministers on Friday proposes raising new funding for poorer countries by taxing financial transactions, tobacco, and shipping and aviation fuels, according to details of a G20 report obtained by Reuters.

The Gates Foundation was tasked by current G20 chair, France, to look at how the governments of its member countries could raise new money for aid to developing nations, including plugging an estimated $80-100 billion funding gap to help the poor adapt to climate change.

With traditional Western donors in Europe and the United States under pressure to cut their budgets, developing nations are looking at news ways to raise resources to develop their growing economies.

Gates' point, according to a draft technical note on the report, is that if African countries can maintain current average growth rates, their economies will double in size by early next decade and gross domestic product per capital will rise by more than 50 percent.

While countries in Africa are looking increasingly toward China and India for support, there is also pressure on Western donors to keep their commitments to aid impoverished nations.

World Bank President Robert Zoellick this week warned that the European crisis was already affecting developing economies through declining demand. He said budgets of poor countries have not yet fully recovered from the double shock of the 2008 global financial crisis and a food price crisis.

He said more than 40 percent of developing nations now have government deficits in excess of 4 percent of GDP.

South African Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan said there was rising concern among policymakers in developing economies about the escalating crisis in Europe and how it could impact their economies.

He said poorer countries were "innocent bystanders that had to suffer quite significantly because of the crisis that we had nothing to do with".

"Not only is the traditional aid envelope being impact upon by the current developments, but the private financing part is also potentially impacted negatively," Gordhan said.

THORNY FINANCIAL TRANSACTION TAX

The Gates report supports the thorny issue of a financial transaction tax as a way of raising "substantial resources" for developing countries. It suggests even a small tax of 10 basis points on equities and 2 basis points on bonds would raise about $48 billion among G20 member states, or $9 billion if only adopted by larger European countries.

Countries such as Canada, Britain, the United States, Australia and China oppose the tax because it puts more burden on banks, while France, Germany and Austria support it.

"Our position hasn't changed - we're still opposed," said Mary Ann Dewey-Plante, spokeswoman for Canada's Finance Minister Jim Flaherty referring to the financial transaction tax. She said testimony in August by Flaherty called such a tax "punitive and counter-productive" because it reduced banks' lending ability during weak economic growth.

U.S.-based business groups on Friday voiced their concern at growing calls for a financial transaction tax, saying they had written to U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner to reiterate their opposition.

"A transaction tax will cycle through the entire U.S. economy, harming both investors, and businesses," the group of trade associations said. "A number of studies have shown that a FTT will impede the efficiency of markets, impair depth and liquidity, raise costs to issuers, investors, and pensioners, and distort capital flows by discriminating against asset classes," they said.

The groups included the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the National Association of Manufacturers and the National Federation of Independent Business.

TACKLING CLIMATE COSTS

Gates' report will also propose a "compelling case" for all governments to tax tobacco heavily to reduce consumption, and generate revenue to meet health costs. It could raise about $170 billion a year in G20 countries.

While some countries already tax tobacco heavily, the average excise tax in G20 countries is 48 percent, and poorer countries tend to be much lower, the report will say.

Gates also supports World Bank and International Monetary Fund proposals to introduce taxes on shipping and aviation fuels, even though these are politically hard to agree on and technically complicated to design, the note said.

IMF and World Bank studies show a carbon-based bunker fuel tax, for example, could raise $30 billion annually by 2020.

A meeting in South Africa in November will tackle the next round of climate change talks. Disputes between rich and poor on sharing curbs in greenhouse gases have slowed agreement on a new global climate agreement.

(Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A report by Microsoft founder Bill Gates to Group of 20 ministers on Friday proposes raising new funding for poorer countries by taxing financial transactions, tobacco, and ...
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A report by Microsoft founder Bill Gates to Group of 20 ministers on Friday proposes raising new funding for poorer countries by taxing financial transactions, tobacco, and ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bioluminescence
01:03 AM on 11/03/2011
A 50 per cent wealth tax on the richest 2% in the western world would still leave them all fabulously wealthy. The richest 2 per cent own more than half of the wealth in the world: cash, equities, real estate, artworks, etc. A 50 per cent wealth tax on their holdings would raise trillions according to some UN studies. That's enough to make a serious beginning to kick starting self sufficiency among the poor and disadvantaged. The caveat is that you can't write checks to governments and regimes and banks. That's how we got into this mess in the first place. Instead set up an organization. Let Bill and Amanda Gates be the first CEOs.
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08:39 AM on 09/26/2011
I know that the Gates money should be spread out to the whole world to help homeless children who have no voice, taken advantage of by greedy people by exploiting them as slaves, prostitute, have not step to a school and have to go to the garbage dump to look for anything that can be sold. USA, has the welfare system, SSI, and so many local religious charity, aided by government contribution, we should focus to the other helpless children to have a better world for all of them.
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loki
cheap politicians for sale
11:20 PM on 09/25/2011
yeah, the IMF claims to help poor countries too. But they just help them become slaves to the corporations through running up their debt so high they have no choice. Wonder if that is what Billy Boy is up too? Just expediting the IMF roll?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
SoCalNick
Former 99er, Business Owner, Proud Veteran 101st
11:48 AM on 09/25/2011
SIGH!

I KNEW I would come to this thread and see a bunch of autoGatesHaters spewing nonsense as usual.

Gates gives BILLIONS of his OWN Cash ( not MS but HIS take) To charities and the Poor.

It seems that is either IGNORED by his Autohaters or just passed over because it is hard to talk trash about the guy and add that to their rants.

If we had more Billionaires like Gates and Buffet we wouldn't be where we are today.

Why is it anyone who talks about doing GOOD is trashed these days?

That is all
rdk70816
Yellowhammer
05:56 PM on 09/25/2011
Yes, he is great about using his money to help causes he thinks are good. The point that many people have is that there are many folks in the USA who could use a lot of hope and change; hope for a job and change in their pocket.
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loki
cheap politicians for sale
11:21 PM on 09/25/2011
yeah, like when he donated millions of outdated unusable software to the Cal school systems. Cleaned out the warehouses and was able to write it all off on taxes at the inflated retail rate. The schools had to pay to have someone dispose of the crap. Yeah, he is a real sweetheart.
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11:41 AM on 09/25/2011
Mr. Gates,
Remember...America helped make you. Now it is time to give something back to America. You could single handedly, and/or with the help of some of your wealthy friends, fix much of America's problems. How about taking 1 or 2 years and concentrate on re-inventing the American dream and help us to evolve into a clean, green and technologically superior country. If you can do it here it will be an example to the rest of the world that America is still the best and we may even get some respect back. Businessmen like you can not continue to be locusts and eat up countries and then move on to the next. Be better than that Mr. Gates.
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loki
cheap politicians for sale
11:22 PM on 09/25/2011
Remember, the Ultra rich, Hate Ameirca
10:26 AM on 09/25/2011
Gates better start worrying about helping Americans, to heck with all these foreigners and dead beats. American workers are tired of all these hand outs.
10:07 AM on 09/25/2011
Gates said himself he is more concerned with making money than he worries about people being exploited.
Take money from us to help the overseas?
We have nothing else left to take.
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AZreb
equal-opportunity Independent heathen
09:36 AM on 09/25/2011
"Please, sir, may we have some more - or at least stop sending help when we need it ourselves?"
02:18 AM on 09/25/2011
Mr. Gates...i honestly thought you were a man of intelligence...you may be rich..but now i wonder how you did it...who's ideas did you steal...First..take care of your homefront/your people..we have plenty of needy americans right here in your country..then...after all that spread your riches to the neighbors.....if you can not take care of your own..what exactly are you up to..shame on you!
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AZreb
equal-opportunity Independent heathen
09:36 AM on 09/25/2011
We can say the same darned thing about our own government!
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hewhowaits
If ignorance is bliss, you must be very happy.
09:25 PM on 09/24/2011
Why don't we help our own people , Bill ?
02:32 PM on 09/24/2011
Poor reporting.. not a single mention of The Robin Hood Tax group who has been advocating this for years and Gates is BACKING them. They make it sound like its Gate's idea when the fact is it isnt..

See here: http://robinhoodtax.org/

Please report all the facts next time... ok?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bradenton
01:49 PM on 09/24/2011
Hey Gates, how about spending some of your "extra" money in America? You make it here. Your African campaign is getting really tired and so is your ego.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
SoCalNick
Former 99er, Business Owner, Proud Veteran 101st
11:50 AM on 09/25/2011
100% IGNORANT comment. what is wrong with you people?? To Lazy to Google how many BILLIONS he gives to this Nations Poor and disadvantaged??
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The Corporate Champion
Conservative, because someone's got to do the work
01:43 PM on 09/24/2011
You want to help poor nations? Outsource more jobs to these poor nations.
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dkandycrown
semper fi
01:24 PM on 09/24/2011
Billions of dollars in foreign aid are going to this country and other countrys. Maybe Bill Gates should do a little more research before he makes a stupid statement. He should start going to their government and asking them why they aren't distributing this money to the people and children who are starving. We have many poor and hungry people and children going to bed without food in this country.
11:49 AM on 09/24/2011
That's really quite good. Gobble up all the money, then propose higher taxes on the rest of us. The best way for the U. S. Government to raise money is to tax the Capital Gains on stocks that aren't traded. At the top marginal tax rate of 35% on the base price when the Microsoft shares were initially acquired, Mr. Gates bill would come in at about $20.65 Billion. However, because unrealized captial gains are not taxed, people like Warren Buffet pay less than 1/10 of 1% on their wealth accumulation, while a minimum wage worker pays a 7.65% payroll tax. It's an abomination.