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Recommended Articles
by Andrew Ross Sorkin, New York Times
Uncle Sam may be coming after the buyout kings. If the tax collector gets his way, Henry R. Kravis, Stephen A. Schwarzman, David Bonderman, David M. Rubenstein and the rest of the leveraged-buyout crowd could soon be forced to add some zeros to the taxable income line on their federal forms... Read on.
by Nomi Prins, Mother Jones
History is pretty clear on this one: Whenever the finance industry discovers a path to quick investment riches for a select few—S&Ls;, junk bonds, Long-Term Capital Management, Enron, the list goes on—a massive reckoning can't be far behind. Today's implosion in the making? Private equity... Read on.
by Andrew Ross Sorkin, New York Times
MORE than a year ago, Victor Fleischer, an untenured professor at the University of Illinois College of Law, finished a draft of a paper about the tax treatment of private equity. At the time, he was just hoping to get the paper published. Taxes are an unglamorous topic, and... Read on.
by Mike Hall, AFL-CIO Blog
Talk about an inside job. It’s little wonder that CEO pay continues to soar when the consulting firms many corporations hire to determine executive pay levels also earn millions of dollars for handling other consulting work for the same company. After all, why tick off... Read on.
by Richard Teitelbaum, Bloomberg
The deals are just the start. The original 'barbarians at the gate' now command a $107 billion global empire. Here's how the buyout giant fires up its companies with a profit-or-perish creed. It's a great time to be Henry Kravis, as he's quick to remind people... Read on.
by Alison Fitzgerald and Ryan J. Donmoyer, Bloomberg
The Internal Revenue Service has begun an inquiry into suspected tax abuses at hedge funds and private- equity firms after determining many firm partners don't file returns and may have improperly characterized transactions. The tax-collection agency is studying whether funds... Read on.
by David Ignatius, Washington Post
For mysterious reasons, people can suddenly become indignant about government policies they have accepted for years as a matter of course. Such a seismic shift seems to be happening in public attitudes toward taxation of America's super-rich financiers. The three leading Democratic candidates... Read on.
by David Sirota, Denver Post
As a central villain in the famous book "Barbarians At the Gate," Henry Kravis has become one of the world's richest mavens of private equity -- the Wall Street sector that buys up companies, breaks them apart and sells their assets. In 2006, Kravis made $450 million, or more per hour ($51,000) than the average American makes in a year... Read on.
by Ianthe Jeanne Dugan, Wall Street Journal
Not long after the Blackstone Group bought Travelport Ltd. last August, workers at the company's office campus here began feeling the squeeze. Two months after the deal closed, scores of employees were lugging boxes of personal belongings to their cars, having lost their jobs. Under Blackstone's ownership, the travel-reservations conglomerate has laid off 841 people, about 10% of its work force... Read on.
by Marc Cooper, AlterNet
"Everything about America is threatened today ... this is an epic struggle for the future of America," Edwards told the cheering crowd. "Corporate greed and the very powerful use their money to control Washington and this corrupting influence is destroying the middle class." While all of the presidential campaigns... Read on.
by Rick Coddington, Mountian Mail
Today we are living under the control of that military-industrial complex. In 1975, there was a great movie called Rollerball starring James Caan. In a nutshell, it was about a futuristic society (2018) where corporations controlled everything. Not individual corporations mind you, but giant worldwide conglomerates... Read on.
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by Adam Doster, In These Times
Private equity funds are complicated entities. Essentially, they are unregulated pools of private capital raised and controlled by investment managers, otherwise known as “general partners.” Typically, managers buy up undervalued companies, de-list them from public exchanges... Read on.
by Eric Schlosser, New York Times
Florida’s tomato growers have long faced pressure to reduce operating costs; one way to do that is to keep migrant wages as low as possible. Although some of the pressure has come from increased competition with Mexican growers, most of it has been forcefully applied by... Read on.
by Stephen Labaton and Jenny Anderson, New York Times
Henry R. Kravis, the billionaire founder of the corporate buyout movement, was working the hallways of Capitol Hill, hoping to kill legislation that would raise his taxes and those of other investment fund executives. While known to powerful people in Washington through longstanding personal.. Read on.
by Michael Shnayerson, Vanity Fair
Topping each other's deals -- $31.4 billion! $39 billion! $45 billion! K.K.R.'s Henry Kravis and the Blackstone Group's Stephen Schwarzman are locked in combat at the top of the private-equity heap. The rivalry has only sharpened since Blackstone's I.P.O. sparked public outrage.. Read on.
by Susan Faludi, Wall Street Journal
On the eve of the 1986 leveraged buy-out of Safeway Stores Inc., the board of directors sat down to a last supper. Peter Magowan, the boyish-looking chairman and cheif executive of the world's largest supermarket chain, rose to offer a toast to the deal that had fended... Read on.
by Sam Pizzigati
Hundreds of migrant farmworkers marched through Miami this past Friday to protest a Florida tomato grower maneuver that will cut some tomato picker wages by 40 percent. The growers are refusing to honor deals the state’s top farmworker group has cut with McDonald’s and Taco Bell... Read on.
by Dana Chasin, TPM Cafe
Last Friday, Rep. Sander Levin (D-MI) introduced a bill to remedy a long-standing tax inequity that allows private equity fund managers the right to claim performance fee income as capital gains rather than ordinary income. This tax break, based on the misnomer "carried interest,"... Read on.
by Jeffrey H. Birnbaum, Washington Post
Soon after Rep. Eric Cantor called a meeting of lobbyists two weeks ago, his aides had to find a larger room. Instead of the couple dozen they had expected, 75 showed up. Cantor, a Virginia Republican, convened the gathering to discuss how to defeat a set of fast-moving proposals that would vastly increase taxes on private-equity firms and hedge.. Read on.
by Robert B. Reich, The American Prospect
This week, Senators Max Baucus and Charles Grassley, the chairman and ranking minority member of the Senate Finance Committee, have been holding "informal meetings" to consider whether the stratospheric incomes of private-equity partners ought to be treated as compensation rather than as capital gains, for tax purposes. Way back in the 1970s, newly-minted MBAs... Read on.
by Jean Eaglesham, Financial Times
A leading private equity executive on Friday broke ranks with his industry by arguing it does not pay enough tax and warning that the government’s capital gains tax reforms, designed principally to tackle perceived abuses in the sector, would not be sufficient to silence critics. The intervention by Jon Moulton... Read on.
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Recommended Reports
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Prepared by the Service Employees International Union
by United for A Fair Economy
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Prepared by the Service Employees International Union
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Recommended Books
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by Bryan Burrough and John Helyar, Collin Business Essentials, 1990
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by David Cay Johnston, Portfolio Hardcover, 2003
by Robert Kuttner, Random House, 2007
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by Sarah Bartlett, Replica Books, 1991
by George Anders, Beard Books, 2002
by William Greider, Simon & Schuster, 2003
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Recommended Videos
Wall Street Journal
Stephen Schwarzman makes about half a billion - B - billion dollars a year. That's inconceivable to the average American. But I think the thing that has really grabbed people's attention is, in spite of that huge income he's paying a 15% tax rate on most of it, because it's treated as capital gains. There are two issues here, first of all there is the issue that the Senate is going after him on -- should he be able to sell shares to the public, but not pay corporate tax? Watch.
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