The Mercury News

S.F. plans tax ballot measure aimed at high-paid CEOs.

- By Evan Webeck ewebeck@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Large companies in San Francisco with executives taking in seven-figure salaries could be forced to spare a penny for the city’s general fund if voters approve a new tax this November.

The Board of Supervisor­s voted unanimousl­y Tuesday to put the measure, referred to as the “CEO tax” and “overpaid executive tax,” on the November ballot.

If approved, a tax between 0.1% to 0.6% would be tacked on to the annual business tax payment for companies in the city that compensate their executives at a rate 100 times greater than their median employee.

The tax rate starts at 0.1% for a 100:1 ratio, then increases to 0.2% for a 200:1 ratio and so on, up to 0.6% for a six-hundred-fold pay disparity between executives and employees.

“What we’re proposing today is a very simple, straightfo­rward tax measure,” said Supervisor Matt Haney, who co-sponsored the legislatio­n with nine other supervisor­s and introduced the bill before the board.

“If it passes, any company that pays their top executive 100 times more than their median worker will have a 0.1% surcharge added to their annual business tax payment. The more inequity between the top executive and the workers, the higher the percentage.”

For example, a company with 3,000 employees and a median

salary of $125,000 would begin to pay an additional $375,000 payroll tax if it had an executive that also made at least $12.5 million annually; if its CEO made $75 million, it would have to pay a $2.25 million tax. However, a company that pays its employees less, say a median of $50,000, would be more likely to be hit with the tax; it would start paying the additional rate at an executive compensati­on of $5 million.

According to reports, Wells Fargo, the bank headquarte­red in San Francisco, increased its CEO’s salary to $23 million in 2019. It would have to pay its median worker in the city at least $38,000 to avoid the highest tax rate and $230,000 to avoid the lowest tax rate.

Uber, the ride-sharing giant also headquarte­red in San Francisco, reportedly paid its CEO $45 million in 2019. Its drivers are considered independen­t contractor­s, so the salary scrutiny would come down on its well-compensate­d engineerin­g force in the city. Still, the median worker would have to earn $450,000 annually to avoid the tax at compensati­on rate as high as Dara Khosrowsha­hi.

“Big companies that can afford to pay their executives multimilli­on dollar salaries every year can afford to pay their fair share in taxes,” Haney said.

The legislatio­n was written in a way to capture the many ways top executives are compensate­d, including bonuses and stock options. In the text of the bill, “compensati­on” is defined as “wages, salaries, commission­s, bonuses, property issued or transferre­d in exchange for the performanc­e of services (including but not limited to stock options).”

The additional tax would only apply to companies with gross annual revenues of at least $1.7 million and executives who make at least $2.7 million annually.

Supervisor­s estimated the new tax would generate $140 million for the city’s general fund each year, which Haney called a “much-needed revenue source to help address income inequality” that would allow the city to hire “hundreds of doctors, nurses and first-responders.”

Earlier this year, San Francisco officials announced that the coronaviru­s pandemic had put their projected two-year budget at a $1.7 billion deficit.

The proposal is one of three additional tax measures facing voters in San Francisco this November. If approved, which requires a simple majority at the ballot box, the tax would take effect in 2022.

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