Times-Herald

Companies facing first tax on stock buybacks in Biden bill

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Democrats have pulled off a quiet first in their just-passed legislatio­n addressing climate change and health care: the creation of a tax on stock buybacks, a cherished tool of Corporate America that had long seemed untouchabl­e.

Under the bill President Joe Biden is scheduled to sign into law Tuesday, companies will face a new 1% excise tax on purchases of their own shares, effectivel­y paying a penalty for a maneuver that they have long used to return cash to investors and bolster their stock price. The tax takes effect in 2023.

Buybacks have ballooned in recent years — they're forecast to reach $1 trillion in 2022 — as companies have swelled with cash from sky-high profits.

Investors, including pension and retirement funds, like the buybacks. But fiery critics of big corporatio­ns and Wall Street like Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders loathe them, calling the practice "paper manipulati­on" to enrich senior executives and big shareholde­rs.

Centrist Democrats, too, such as Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, have long criticized buybacks.

Democrats say that instead of returning cash to shareholde­rs, big companies should use the money to increase employees' wages or invest in the business. They are hoping the excise tax — it's projected to bring the government an additional $74 billion in revenue over 10 years — will cause a major shift in corporate behavior.

But some experts are skeptical that the tax will work as intended. They note that businesses have other methods for rewarding shareholde­rs, raising the prospect that legislatio­n aimed at halting one corporate stock practice could instead facilitate another, with new and unpredicta­ble effects on the economy.

How it all plays out could be significan­t for the future landscape of big U.S. companies, their employees and their shareholde­rs, and for the political staying power of one of the signature legislativ­e initiative­s of Biden and his Democratic majorities in Congress.

 ?? Submitted Photo ?? Kellen Blanchett was the keynote speaker at the closing of this year’s summer portion of the youth employment program. The last day of the program was Friday, Aug. 12.
Submitted Photo Kellen Blanchett was the keynote speaker at the closing of this year’s summer portion of the youth employment program. The last day of the program was Friday, Aug. 12.

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