Houston Chronicle

Lobbying blitz watered down climate bill tax

- By Alan Rappeport

WASHINGTON — An hour after Democrats released the text of their climate and tax legislatio­n, Washington lobbyists for the private equity industry sprang into action.

With a final Senate vote nearing on the major package Sunday, a late addition would have subjected companies controlled by private investment funds to a new 15 percent corporate minimum tax in the legislatio­n that was supposed to apply to America’s biggest corporatio­ns.

But a last-minute mobilizati­on of political muscle and direct pleas to Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, DAriz., who opposes tax increases and is sympatheti­c to private equity, got the measure scrapped. The blitz was emblematic of the messy nature of tax policymaki­ng and how policies meant to curb tax avoidance can spring new carve-outs on the fly.

The issue stems from how private equity firms work: They typically invest in a portfolio of companies. Under the provision that was the point of contention, if the combined “book income” of companies controlled by the same private equity fund exceeded $1 billion, all of those companies, even if they were small or medium-size, would be liable to pay the new 15 percent tax on the income they reported to their shareholde­rs.

“Looks like someone is trying sneak one past everyone,” Neil Bradley, chief policy officer at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, said on Twitter on Saturday.

Freedom Works, a conservati­ve organizati­on that lobbies for lower taxes, blared out warnings on its Twitter feed, claiming that Democrats were targeting small firms that rely on capital investment to expand.

Private equity industry groups circulated opposition research on what they called a “stealth” tax, which they said would hit more than 18,000 companies.

Sinema’s insistence

At the urging of Sinema, the measure was removed after hours of horse-trading over how to replace an estimated $35 billion in government revenue that would be lost by taking out of the proposal. Ultimately, lawmakers opted to extend a rule limiting deductions that companies can take on business losses that Republican­s enacted in 2017.

The new corporate minimum tax had already been whittled down before the changes over the weekend. Sinema pushed last week to preserve deductions that manufactur­ers use to offset the cost of equipment purchases, and lawmakers decided to keep a deduction for wireless spectrum purchases that telecommun­ications companies said was important for the rollout of high-speed broadband.

Big win for private equity

The big win for private equity’s lobbyists was on so-called carried interest. Democrats had proposed curbing the special tax treatment that hedge fund managers and private equity executives get on the investment gains they take as compensati­on. After Sinema objected, the curb on carried interest was replaced with a 1 percent excise tax on corporate stock repurchase­s.

Tax experts were already skeptical about the corporate minimum tax, saying companies would be able to maneuver their way around paying it.

“The minimum tax has always been like a 10th-best solution, and when you start taking out more elements, is it now the 12thbest solution?” said Steven Rosenthal, a senior fellow at the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center, noting that relatively few companies would now face the new tax. “There may be more government staff dedicated to auditing these companies than there are companies subject to the tax.”

The Joint Committee on Taxation had estimated that the new corporate minimum tax would apply to 150 companies, but that was before more exceptions were added to the legislatio­n. The tax was projected raise more than $300 billion in new revenue over a decade, but the slimmeddow­n version is likely to raise just over $200 billion.

“There’s still the issue that companies are going to end up paying little tax under this anyway,” said Kyle Pomerleau, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.

Pomerleau also lamented that by taxing book income, Congress was ceding some control over tax policy to the Financial Accounting Standards Board, an independen­t organizati­on that sets accounting rules. Book income is the profit that companies report to shareholde­rs and investors on their income statements, which are generally governed by those accounting rules.

The new tax is intended to target big companies, such as Amazon and Meta, that have for years found ways to lower their tax rates by capitalizi­ng on deductions in the tax code. Tax experts generally favor increasing tax rates — the current corporate rate is 21 percent — or scaling back deductions. But because Republican­s were united against that approach, and Democrats did not have enough votes for it, they settled on the corporate minimum tax.

Progressiv­es expressed disappoint­ment after Democrats removed the measure that would have affected businesses that are controlled by private equity and accused Sinema of being beholden to Wall Street and lobbyists.

“Whatever job she gets with Wall Street after losing her primary, they can’t pay her enough,” Adam Green, cofounder of the Progressiv­e Change Campaign Committee, wrote on Twitter.

The House is expected to pass the Senate bill this week and President Joe Biden to sign it into law soon after. The tax changes would take effect next year, and the Treasury Department would be racing to develop regulation­s and guidance to interpret parts of the law.

Sinema said in a tweet Sunday that she was proud of the outcome of the negotiatio­ns, which she said would spur innovation and job creation.

 ?? Kenny Holston/New York Times ?? Sen. Chuck Schumer discusses the bill. Political muscle and pleas to Sen. Kyrsten Sinema killed a measure to keep private investment funds in a 15 percent corporate minimum tax status.
Kenny Holston/New York Times Sen. Chuck Schumer discusses the bill. Political muscle and pleas to Sen. Kyrsten Sinema killed a measure to keep private investment funds in a 15 percent corporate minimum tax status.

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