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Thursday, August 16, 2007
Ken Blackwell :: Townhall.com Columnist
American Private Equity: A Cow to Milk or Butcher
by Ken Blackwell
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What was the biggest suprise of Election Day?



“For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction.”

- Sir Isaac Newton

A general good rule of thumb is to expect that someone will be soaked whenever Congress starts talking about making the tax code fairer. Another good rule is if you want less of something, tax it. Such is the case with a proposed adjustment to an established tax rule with far reaching implications for the American economy.

Always hungry for more money to spend on pet projects, spendthrift members of Congress have found new taxable cash cows to fillet — private equity funds, partnerships, venture capitalists, and hedge funds. Foolishly, they have opted to fillet these cows for a month’s worth of steak instead of milking them for economic nutrition for years.

Specifically, the members of Congress have placed a 130% tax increase bullseye squarely on the backs of fund managers. These are hyper-aggressive and competitive financial managers who work hard, take risks, drive innovation, and earn tens of millions of dollars on a single completed deal.

In Washington, the issue seems like a politician’s win-win. The argument goes: Why not fillet and cook these jet-setters to feed the insatiable appetite of big government for higher taxes?

Popular opinion certainly isn’t on the side of these managers, despite their contributions to domestic economic growth. Most people still picture these guys as the “greed is good” shouting Gordon Gekkos from the 1980s era film of financial cautionary tale “Wall Street.”

These guys are getting uber-rich while most people continue to work 50-hour weeks just to pay the mortgage and put the kids through college. It sounds really simple. Open and shut. Until you dig a little deeper.

The funds these individuals have made so profitable have an enormously positive impact on the U.S. economy and Main Street America. Ham-handedly tinkering with such an important capital driver will have a negative impact on the nation’s economic vitality.

In the past two decades, these funds have yielded returns in the hundreds of billions — benefiting a wide array of individuals and projects. From constructing shopping malls, office buildings, and hotels to funding pensions for teachers, firefighters, and police officers, the funds’ capital investments have substantially contributed to job creation and improvement in the quality of life many Americans enjoy.

Nearly 11 years ago when I was Ohio’s treasurer, Jack Kemp and I crisscrossed the nation as members of the congressionally-created Commission on Economic Growth and Tax Reform. We spoke with and listened to thousands of Americans from all walks of life. One of our most substantial finds was the need to radically reduce taxes on capital and labor.

Residential realtors understand the benefits. In fact, the proposed tax tinkering effects them too. They argue that without the capital investments in communities the funds provide, many residential markets will lose their attractiveness. And, the American dream of home ownership will become more elusive for many more.

Commercial realtors get it as well. Incoming chairman of the International Council of Shopping Centers, Adam Ifshin, recently told a Senate committee that the tax increase would be “the most sweeping and potentially most destructive tax on real estate” in decades. Continued...

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About The Author
Mr. Blackwell, a contributing editor at Townhall.com, is a senior fellow at the Family Research Council and American Civil Rights Union.
 
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Sheep
Good point eon. As they corral(gerrymander) us into our pens, you'd think we would wise up.

If killer is correct, then I agree. The matter is, what is being taxed, who is being taxed, etc. If these managers are pocketing income at a much lower rate than joe six-pack then f&%k that. If congress is eyeballing the fund income, then shame on them but, par for the course until the american public wakes up (I think we have) and, gets mad enough to do something about it (??)

Not cows, actually
The politicians view us as sheep. To be sheared as and when they please, and to be made into mutton when we no longer produce enough wool to suit them.

This is why I consider most politicians (of whatever ostensible political "philosophy") to be wolves masquerading as sheepdogs.

We need more REAL sheepdogs. Which means we sheep should get some different DNA into our systems.

Woof.


cheers

eon
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