theoretic
All Star
I'm saying the original premise of using transaction fees by private entitites to pay for others' choice of education is rather socialistic.
I'm saying the original premise of using transaction fees by private entitites to pay for others' choice of education is rather socialistic.
A financial transaction tax, or FTT, may reduce gross domestic product growth by 0.3pc to 2.4pc, according to the report, which examined published studies on the proposal.
The Council highlights the significant empirical evidence that suggests financial transaction taxes lead to lower liquidity, higher volatility, higher transaction costs, lower asset prices and a higher cost of capital—ultimately resulting in lower investment activity, job losses, and lower GDP growth.
this cost would reach around €4.4bn (£3.6bn), equivalent to a 0.2pc drop in GDP – despite the fact that the UK will not be implementing the tax.
Why doesn't the left get this?Institutions would just raise their tuition price to take advange
Why doesn't the left get this?![]()
I'm saying the original premise of using transaction fees by private entitites to pay for others' choice of education is rather socialistic. And it dillutes the value of "higher" education. At some point you'll need a PhD to differentiate yourself similar to how you need a bachelors at least now vs previously a diploma.
Well if everyone can get into a university for free it further creates education inflation and good luck paying those professors



"education inflation" breh, what? 
Hells yeah. Peasant class ain't finna oppress itself.We keeping folks stupid for business' sake?

Would this be a good idea finance/economic heads?
Ive been thinking about this a while, and did a little research. Ive heard varying proposals, but according to one source, even a tax of one half of one percent would amount to $350 billion dollars a year.
Im not a guru or anything on the matter, but Id assume that this could curtail speculation a bit in addition to providing much needed tax revenue to the gov't, which could use every penny they get.
Yup. Joseph Stiglitz, Ralph Nader, Paul Volcker, Jeffrey Sachs, Warren Buffett, Paul Krugman, Angela Merkel, Sheila Bair...that's an A-1 list.
I know Europe has flirted with this idea but I think some argue it may actually hurt GDP.
I would be more in favor of banning high frequency trading.

Free education would be such a smart investment in the short and long termEducation should be free, but unfortunately this will never get far. It's damn good red meat, though. The debates when this comes up against the centrists![]()
They're doing this anyway.Institutions would just raise their tuition pricing, especially in Republican controlled states which is 30, to get more revenue from students