A group of minority and business leaders including former basketball star Earvin "Magic" Johnson plans to form a group called the Access to Capital Coalition to fight against efforts in Congress to end the tax advantages enjoyed by the hedge fund and private equity industry, according to the Wall Street Journal (subscription required).
"Members of the new coalition argue that increasing the taxes on carried interest, also known as the carry, would reduce the incentives for private-equity funds to invest and would make it harder to recruit top talent, particularly for small and midsize funds," the paper said. "Many of the new coalition's members run smaller funds that focus on investing in low- and moderate-income areas."
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce released a study today detailing the damage that these proposals could cause the economy, according to Reuters.
So, making hedge fund and private equity billionaires pay their fair share of taxes would somehow hurt poor people. I don't believe it and I doubt this coalition will do much to sway members of Congress. This issue isn't about taxation, it's about fairness.
Instead of paying the ordinary tax rates of 35 percent, these private equity and hedge fund managers pay the 15-percent capital gains rate on their carried interest. It's tough for most Americans to understand why one group of very rich people pays much lower taxes than another group of rich people. There is no political upside for any member of Congress to stick up for the industry, particularly as the presidential contest kicks into high gear.
There seems to be broad bipartisan support in Congress to close this loophole. It's not a question of if the industry pays higher taxes but when and how much.



Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
9-05-2007 @ 12:47PM
cristina martin firvida said...
The article in the Wall Street Journal mentioned that some women business leaders are involved with this new pro-hedge fund group, but they do not represent the interests of most women. More critical to women is what they are giving up when carried interest is not properly taxed as ordinary income. One devastating effect of not taxing the carry as compensation is that fund managers are evading Medicare taxes - the National Women's Law Center estimates $900 million - $1.8 billion in Medicare revenue is lost annually, enough to cover the Medicare hospital expenses of 204,000 - 408,000 Americans, most of them women. Women are not served well by the unfair tax treatment that the carry currently gets.