Robin Hood Tax campaign

International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 4 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2025

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Robin Hood Tax campaign

Non-governmental organisation

Robin Hood Tax campaign

Just a couple of years ago, it would have been difficult to imagine non-governmental organisations campaigning for a financial transaction tax (FTT) as among the world’s greatest influences in tax.

But in January 2013, 11 EU member states were given the green light to implement the FTT. Now four of the five biggest economies in Europe are signed up to introducing what was once considered to be a radical, fringe idea.

“It was a historic moment for FTT campaigners around Europe who’d witnessed the tax move from political backwater to brink of reality,” says Simon Chouffot of the Robin Hood Tax Campaign (RHTC). “It was proof that member states can act to ensure banks pay for the damage they caused. The 11 countries involved make up 90% of eurozone GDP, 66% of EU GDP.”

The UK is notable in its opposition to the FTT. This makes the British-based RHTC - which has attracted the support of hundreds prominent business leaders, economists and celebrities from around the world - even more important as it continues to pile pressure on the government to join its European neighbours in adopting the FTT.

“In a year where banks were mired in some of the biggest scandals in the history of banking, the tax remains popular amongst the European electorate,” says Chouffot. “Bank lobbyists have been scrambled to fight a rearguard action - realising it is too late for the proposal to be rejected they are attempting to water down the FTT proposal. Campaigners have focused on ensuring this will not happen.”

Named after the English folk hero who took from the rich to give to the poor, it is the RHTC’s mission to see an FTT which taxes the banks to generate billions in revenue to fight climate change and relieve poverty in the UK and abroad.

“2013 was the year in which the FTT moved from being a great idea to a political reality,” says Chouffot. “The 11 states should be congratulated for standing up to the might of the financial sector and committing to implement a moderate and proven tax that will ensure the financial sector contributes towards the costs of the crisis they precipitated.”

Further reading

European Parliament bolsters FTT

Mayor Boris Johnson fails to understand FTT by calling on European banks to headquarter in London

Legal opinion means EU FTT to be further watered down but not derailed


The Global Tax 50 2013

« Previous

Akhilesh Ranjan

View the complete list

Next »

Pascal Saint-Amans

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

SF: Germany has forgotten to think about digital reporting requirements, a WTS partner claimed at ITR’s Indirect Tax Forum 2025
E-invoicing is currently characterised by dynamism, with fragmentation acting as a key catalyst for increasing interoperability, says Aida Cavalera of the International Observatory on eInvoicing
Pillar two and the US tax system ‘could work in harmony’, Scott Levine tells ITR in an exclusive interview to mark his arrival at Baker McKenzie
Peter White, who has a tax debt of A$2 million, has been banned for five years from seeking registration with Australia’s Tax Practitioners Board (TPB)
Wopke Hoekstra’s comments followed US measures aimed against ‘unfair foreign taxes’; in other news, Grant Thornton and Holland & Knight made key tax partner hires
An Administrative Review Tribunal ruling last month in Australia v Alcoa represents a 'concerning trend' for the tax authority, one expert tells ITR
A recent decision underlines that Indian courts are more willing to look beyond just legal compliance and examine whether foreign investment structures have real business substance
Following his Liberal Party’s election victory, one source expects Mark Carney to follow the international consensus on pillar two, as experts assess the new administration
A German economics professor was reportedly ‘irritated’ by how the Finnish ministry of finance used his data
Countries that care about the fair taxation of tech multinationals and equitable global distribution of wealth should back the UN’s tax framework, writes economist Abdelmalek Riad
Gift this article