Thursday, February 28, 2013

T-1 to Austerity

Now we count down by the hour to the automatic across the board federal spending cuts and the negative impact on the economy.  Small businesses will be particularly hurt when money starts leaving Main Street.

But don’t expect any sympathy from the U.S. Chamber for the plight of small business (even though it says that it represents small business also).  The U.S. Chamber has come out against any effort in the Senate for a balanced approach between raising revenue and cutting spending—something the public is firmly behind. 
Why?

Because they are protecting their big dues paying members--the multinational corporations who pay little in federal income tax. 
So damn the torpedoes and full steam ahead toward austerity and the harm to small businesses.  But at least we’ll protect all the big boys from paying their fair share of taxes.

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

T-2 to Austerity

The Washington Post
February 26, 2013

Sequestering common sense

By

The media is going sequester 24-7. Anyone who hasn’t been paying attention to the across-the-board spending cuts about to hit this Friday is about to have little choice. The brouhaha about the austerity bomb is drowning out any attention to what is actually going on in the economy — which is supposedly the point of the whole debate.

The stark reality is the economy is still in trouble and Americans are still hurting. The economy contracted last quarter, even before Americans got hit with the end of the payroll tax holiday, which will take $1,000 out of the typical family’s annual paycheck. The Congressional Budget Office projects that growth will inch along at about 1.5 percent this year. That translates into continued mass unemployment — with more than 20 million people in need of full-time work — and falling wages. The richest 1 percent captured an unimaginable 121 percent of all income growth in 2009 and 2010, coming out of the Great Recession. They pocketed all of the growth in income, while 99 percent of Americans actually lost ground. That trend is likely to get worse rather than better.

Federal Reserve Governor Janet L. Yellen described the tragic human costs of widespread, long-term unemployment in an important speech this month. Families lose their homes; divorce and depression rise; children are scarred; skills are lost. A young generation is leaving school to sit on the couch.

Yet most of Washington — from the newly reelected Democratic president to the self-described insurgent Tea Party Republicans — is ignoring this reality to focus on cutting deficits.

The Republican Congress seems intent on letting the “sequester” take place — the idiotic across the board cuts that were explicitly designed to be anathema to both parties. Senate Democrats call not for repealing these cuts, but for “paying for” delaying them for a few more months.

Why this fixation? Deficits aren’t careering out of control. In fact, as the Congressional Budget Office reports, in relation to the economy, the deficit has fallen faster over the past three years than at any time since the demobilization after World War II. Calls for cutting Medicare benefits ignore the reality that the slowing rise in Medicare costs has already cut about $500 billion from its projected costs over 10 years compared to estimates made two years ago.

In fact, the too-rapid and premature decline in deficits in a weak economy is hindering any recovery, as Yellen noted.

Sadly, none of the supposed free-market ideologues in Congress are listening to the markets. With interest rates near zero, investors are sending the United States a flashing green light: Go borrow money to rebuild our decrepit and deteriorating infrastructure, investments that would put people back to work and make the country far more competitive.

So why this obsession with deficits and debt? There are many factors, but central to it is a widespread elite consensus that this crisis provides a unique opportunity to “fix” — exact benefit cuts from — Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, despite the opposition of broad majorities across the political spectrum.

No one has done more to propagate and consolidate this consensus than the Wall Street billionaire Pete Peterson, who has been railing about the threat posed by the “paid vacation” provided by Social Security and Medicare for over three decades. As a special feature in this week’s Nation (which I edit) and a valuable report by the Center for Media and Democracy demonstrate, Peterson has devoted nearly half a billion dollars to this quest since 2008.

Only last week, Fix the Debt, one of the many groups funded by Peterson, trotted out its co-founders, Erskine Bowles and Alan Simpson, to lay out yet another plan. Echoing Peterson’s views, they called for cuts in Medicare and Social Security, tax reform that would lower top rates but close loopholes (including middle-class tax breaks such as that for employer-based health care), and curbs on all other government spending.

This elite consensus ignores how we got into the fix we are in. The deficit was under 2 percent of gross domestic product in 2007 and the debt under 40 percent of GDP when Wall Street’s wilding blew up the housing bubble and drove the economy into the Great Recession. Wall Street got bailed out, but the deficit soared to 11 percent of GDP and Americans lost nearly 40 percent of their wealth. You’d think anyone so fixated on avoiding another Pearl Harbor moment would focus on making certain Wall Street was properly shackled, and the too-big-to-fail banks broken up.

But the elite bipartisan consensus is focused on sending the bill for Wall Street’s mess to an already battered middle class, by weakening the basic pillars of a family’s economic security — Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid. And they are a lot closer than anyone thinks. The sequester is just the first of a series of austerity bombs that the Republican Congress will use to extort cuts in these benefits.

It’s time to stop such extortionists from holding our country’s economic future hostage.

Katrina vanden Heuvel is the editor and publisher of The Nation.

Read at

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

T-3 to Austerity

With the automatic budget cuts across the board to federal agencies coming three days from now, bills to address the issue are apparently the only real action taking place in Washington.

According to The Hill:
The Republican plan would maintain the level of spending reductions but give President Obama more flexibility to minimize their impact on military preparedness and other vital government services, such as air traffic control and airport security screening.

The Democratic package, meanwhile, would freeze the sequester through the end of the calendar year and offset the $110 billion cost with an even mix of spending cuts and tax increases.


Despite all the dire warnings of economic consequences for allowing the sequester cuts to take place as prescribed by law, neither bill will get the 60 votes needed to pass.  The Senate Dems would have the votes to pass their bill (favored by most Americans) if we actually allowed a majority to pass legislation (another good reason for Senate filibuster reform).

In the House, also according to The Hill, Republicans are addressing the cuts to the Pentagon:
Rep. Mike Coffman (R-Colo.) is introducing a bill that would target the $500 billion in cuts — rather than letting them hit across-the-board— while legislation from Rep. Randy Forbes (R-Va.) would do away with the defense side of sequestration altogether.


B
ut there is at least one South Carolina GOP House member who will not vote to spare the military or any federal agency.

Representative Jeff Duncan says that all agencies should be able to absorb the cuts.  Mr. Duncan is a strong advocate for cutting federal spending and he’s putting his vote where his mouth is.  While you might not agree with him, he is willing to suffer any public backlash from the sequester cuts. 

Whether Mr. Duncan's voters will agree with his position that the nation needs a good shot of austerity remains to be seen after the cuts are made and the economy is hurt.  But he stands on his principles.  And that’s a lot better than many of his colleagues talking out of both sides of their mouths for the need for spending cuts as long as they don’t affect their pet projects.

Monday, February 25, 2013

T-4 to Austerity

Obamacare haters are on the verge of finally having some success in stopping the implementation of the healthcare reform.  If the sequester’s automatic budget cuts go into effect this Friday, federal spending on three of the components of teh Affordable Care Act will be impacted.

Less money will be available for establishing the health insurance marketplaces (exchanges).  State entities trying to establish CO-OP health insurance plans will see less money.  And small business tax credits for offering health insurance will be cut.
But, of course, to achieve this slim success against Obamacare, the opponents have to be willing to put the brakes on the whole economy.  

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Not expanding Medicaid will cost SC small businesses


The State
February 21, 2013

By FRANK KNAPP JR. — Guest Columnist
Columbia, SC — The debate is underway over whether to expand the federal-state health insurance program, Medicaid, to more uninsured low-income South Carolinians.

Opponents of expansion, made possible by the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare, are led by Gov. Nikki Haley’s director of Health and Human Services, Tony Keck, who runs the state’s Medicaid program. Mr. Keck’s public position is that the issue is not about cost but about making more of our citizens healthy. He argues that expanding Medicaid is an inefficient way of achieving that goal.
In December, I attended a forum where Mr. Keck explained that having health insurance was not a good predictor of health outcomes. Therefore the state would do better in promoting health by concentrating on education and jobs while encouraging our citizens to make better personal choices about their behavior.

But in response to a question I posed, Mr. Keck admitted that a low-income person’s health would be better if he had Medicaid than if he did not. “But at what cost?” he quickly added.

Mr. Keck’s almost reflexive response reveals that the tactic of arguing that Medicaid isn’t the best way to improve health is really an effort to misdirect the debate away from the real issue — cost.
If we remove the partisanship over Obamacare and admit that improving the level of education, size of paychecks and behavioral decisions of the state’s low-income citizens is an admirable but daunting goal that will take decades to achieve, the primary objection to expanding Medicaid to improve health today is cost.

Opponents of expansion say that the state can’t afford its eventual 10 percent share of the Medicaid expansion. Mr. Keck’s actuary projects that the cost to the state could be up to $1 billion by 2020.
Proponents of expansion point to a study that projects that economic activity in the state will increase by $3.3 billion and 44,000 jobs will be created from expanding Medicaid. This increase in economic impact would result in the state actually taking in more revenue than it would spend on the expansion through 2020, contradicting Mr. Keck’s analysis. After 2020 the state’s budget would experience a small net loss due to expansion.

Unfortunately, this cost debate has largely overlooked an important factor associated with not expanding Medicaid — the cost to our small businesses.
Many low-income employees work for our state’s small businesses, and expanding Medicaid will result in reduced costs to these employers.

First, there is a significant cost to a small business when workers are not on the job because they are sick or have to care for family members who are ill. Even employees who don’t miss work when they are sick are less effective. Workers with health insurance for themselves and their families miss less work due to illness and are more productive. Clearly expanding Medicaid to cover low-income workers will economically benefit their small-business employers.
Second, small businesses that want to offer health insurance to employees will find it more affordable under a Medicaid expansion. Small employers with Medicaid-eligible workers will have fewer employees to cover on a private group health plan and thus have less in premiums to pay. In addition, with expansion the cost of the employee’s private insurance will drop due to a reduction in the hidden tax on every health insurance policy, which pays for the uncompensated care for the uninsured. Based on projections by Milliman, the actuarial firm used by Mr. Keck for his cost projections, the reduced premiums could be up to $1,000 per year for family coverage.

The third benefit of a Medicaid expansion involves the requirement of the Affordable Care Act that businesses with 50 or more employees either offer health insurance or pay a penalty. Workers on Medicaid are not counted toward the total number of employees, so the Medicaid expansion would mean that even many small businesses with 50 or more employees could avoid paying a penalty for not offering health insurance.
While our state officials continue to debate the cost of expanding Medicaid, that debate must include the cost to small businesses for not doing so.

Mr. Knapp is the president and CEO of the S.C. Small Business Chamber of Commerce; contact him at Sbchamber@scsbc.org.

Read more here: http://www.thestate.com/2013/02/21/2641481/knapp-not-expanding-medicaid-will.html#storylink=cpy


 

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Support the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

Remember the Great Recession???

One of the reforms Congress passed to try to stop a future repeast of the financial meltdown that hurt small businesses and individuals was the establishment of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB).

Below is a letter from my friend Katherine McFate asking for your support for the CFPB.  I encourage you to join the effort for a strong government agency that has already taken strong measures to protect us from the greed of Wall Street.
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February 20, 2013

In the wake of the meltdown of the financial markets brought on by risky and predatory lending practices, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) was created to rein in credit card companies and other financial institutions that prey on vulnerable consumers. In the 24 months since it was created, we've applauded its substantive work and the outstanding way that it operates, inviting public input and exemplifying transparency. Unfortunately, its important work is now threatened. The Senate vote to confirm Richard Cordray as the head of the agency has been blocked for two years. (He's been there working under an interim appointment.) It's time for the Senate to take a vote.

Please tell your senators to vote on Richard Cordray's nomination so that the CFPB can continue protecting all of us from the exploitative practices of big banks, mortgage lending institutions, and credit card companies.

Thanks to the CFPB, approximately half a billion dollars have been returned to consumers cheated by credit card companies.

Thanks to the CFPB, new mortgage rules will protect families and level the playing field between small financial institutions like community banks and credit unions and larger banks.

Thanks to the CFPB, students will get more accurate information about the real costs of their student loans.

It required public pressure from Americans like you to establish the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Now it's time for us to demand a vote on Richard Cordray's nomination.

Please make sure that the CFPB can continue to defend citizens from unfair lending practices and other abuses. Write your senators today to demand an immediate, up-or-down vote.

Thanks being an engaged citizen!

Warm regards,

Katherine McFate
President and CEO
Center for Effective Government

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Tell Congress to protect our small retailers

In 2011 the state sold out our small businesses and permitted Amazon not to collect sales tax from in-state purchases in exchange for the company building a distribution facility in Lexington County.  This allowed Amazon to continue to have an unfair competitive advantage over our small retailers.  That sales tax exemption runs out in 2016. 

But it’s not only Amazon that is not collecting state sales tax from South Carolinians making purchase online.  There are other companies doing the same and hiding behind federal law that says they don’t have to collect state sales tax if they don’t have a “presence” in the state.  They just keep on taking sales away from our small businesses because their prices are lower from not charging sales tax.

Please read the letter below and help send Congress a message to enable states to shut down this unlevel playing field that our small retailers face every day. 

Oh, and happy Valentine’s Day.
----------------------------------------------------

Dear South Carolina,

Great news!  The Marketplace Fairness Act is set to be reintroduced today, February 14, in both the House and the Senate.  What a great Valentine’s Day present for hardworking small businesses.  We need to make sure Members of Congress, both new and old, know e-fairness is still an urgent priority for America’s small businesses and communities.

Please take a moment to send your Members of Congress an email urging them to ensure the Marketplace Fairness Act passes in 2013.

Inaction by Congress means online-only retailers will continue to receive a government-sanctioned tax advantage.  Our businesses, employees, and communities will pay the price.  While some states are starting to collect sales taxes from Amazon and other online retailers, only federal legislation will fully level the playing field.  

Send a message to Congress today: No more picking winners and losers.  Tell Congress to make 2013 the year all retailers are treated equally.

We’ve worked toward passage of federal e-fairness for a long time.  This is our chance to finally level the playing field for Main Street. 

We sincerely appreciate your hard work and continued support.  Please take a few minutes to reach out to your Members of Congress today.

Best,

The Alliance for Main Street Fairness

 

Monday, February 11, 2013

BlueCross sued for collusion


Powerhouse law firm takes on NC insurance company and other ‘Blue’ plans nationwide


By AMES ALEXANDER and JOSEPH NEFF
The State, Saturday, Feb. 09, 2013 


CHARLOTTE — A major lawsuit filed against BlueCross BlueShield of North Carolina has generated a flurry of class-action cases that, if successful, could result in lower health insurance premiums for tens of millions of Americans. 

The suit alleges that BlueCross plans nationwide have driven up health care costs by colluding to carve up the nation’s insurance market.

As the plaintiffs tell it, the arrangement works like this: 38 Blue Cross and Blue Shield plans nationally have illegally agreed not to compete on one another’s turf. Consequently, BlueCross plans in South Carolina and Virginia don’t compete with BlueCross BlueShield of North Carolina. 


BlueCross strongly disputes the allegations, saying that it is simply trying to get its customers the best prices available. The company says its territorial restrictions and contracts have withstood legal challenges and government scrutiny for years.

The plaintiffs – three Mooresville, N.C., residents and two small businesses – are represented by lawyers with a powerhouse firm in Washington, and some antitrust experts predict they will win in court.

The various BlueCross plans are independent insurance companies. But the lawsuit alleges that they have colluded through their national trade group – the Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association.

More competition would mean lower prices, the lawsuit contends. Instead, the arrangement has allowed the insurers to dominate their markets and to charge inflated premiums.

For years, BlueCross BlueShield of North Carolina required hospitals and other key health care providers to agree to contract provisions, commonly known as “most favored nation” clauses, which ensured that BlueCross received the best prices for health care services.

The lawsuit argues that those clauses stifle competition by preventing other insurers from negotiating for lower costs. That, in turn, leads to higher premiums at the other insurance companies.

BlueCross BlueShield of North Carolina, a not-for-profit company that is fully taxed, is the largest private health insurer in North Carolina, controlling more than 70 percent of the market. It has reserves of more than $1.8 billion.

In court filings, BlueCross said the N.C. Department of Insurance thoroughly regulates and approves its contracts with providers, including provisions like the MFN clauses.

BlueCross also said plaintiffs have yet to point to facts showing that the MFN clauses have driven up prices.

The U.S. Justice Department has been investigating whether BlueCross MFN clauses in North Carolina and other states violate antitrust laws. A BlueCross BlueShield of North Carolina spokesman said that the company is cooperating fully with the ongoing investigation.

The company said it is no longer including MFN clauses in new contracts and has recently removed them from old ones.

The North Carolina case, filed in early 2012, was the first of more than 20 class actions making similar allegations against BlueCross plans nationwide. Those cases recently have been consolidated before a federal judge in Alabama, which means that the litigation’s outcome likely would affect companies and policyholders nationwide.

Among those representing the North Carolina plaintiffs are lawyers from Boies, Schiller and Flexner, a high-profile Washington firm known for taking on complex cases. The U.S. government hired the firm’s chairman, David Boies, to litigate its antitrust case against Microsoft.

The Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association called the lawsuits “meritless.”

‘Benefits of competition’ 

But some antitrust experts find the plaintiff’s arguments credible. 

Duke University law professor Barak Richman, an expert on health care policy and antitrust law, said he thinks antitrust law is in the plaintiff’s favor.

“We’ve always known that Blue Cross of America uses its trademark to prevent competition,” he said. “And we’ve always questioned whether it’s legal.”

Nationally, “Blue” plans cover about 100 million Americans. 


Read more here: http://www.thestate.com/2013/02/09/2624801/bluecross-sued-for-collusion.html#storylink=misearch

Friday, February 8, 2013

Good news for the majority of Americans


I have some good news or some bad news for you.  It all depends on your political disposition.
If you are in favor of severe austerity measures to shrink the evil national budget deficit or if you believe that the Environmental Protection Agency has overused its powers to control greenhouse gasses, this is a doubly bad news day for you.

The Congressional Budget Office says that the federal budget deficit last month shrank by $25 billion compared to January of 2012.  The reason was not cutting government spending but a 15% increase in revenue from a little higher income tax on the wealthy and expiration of the payroll tax holiday.  Plus there are new restrictions on tax deductions this year.  We still will have a sizeable budget deficit in 2013 but it will be a lot lower than it has been in many years.
A new Duke University survey is out showing that 64% of the public support government (i.e. the EPA) “regulating greenhouse gas emissions from power plants, factories and cars and requiring utilities to generate more power from ‘clean’ low-carbon sources.” However this poll has some bad news for proponents of a carbon tax to reduce carbon emissions…the public doesn’t like the idea.

So if you aren’t a climate denier or austerity proponent, you can go into the weekend smiling.

Thursday, February 7, 2013

Fracking Seen by EPA as No. 2 Emitter of Greenhouse Gases

Bloomberg News
February 6, 2013


By Mark Drajem


Natural gas and oil production is the second-biggest source of U.S. greenhouse gases, the government said, emboldening environmentalists who say tighter measures are needed to curb the emissions from hydraulic fracturing.

In its second-annual accounting of emissions that cause global warming from stationary sources, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for the first time included oil and natural- gas production. Emissions from drilling, including fracking, and leaks from transmission pipes totaled 225 million metric tons of carbon-dioxide equivalents during 2011, second only to power plants, which emitted about 10 times that amount.

Gas and oil production "is an area where we have technological answers to our problems," Michael Levi, a fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York, said in an interview. "We know how to fix many of these problems; we just need to make the decision to do it."

The EPA yesterday released on its website details of emissions from about 8,000 factories, power plants and refineries. Two coal-fired power facilities owned by Atlanta- based Southern Co (SO). topped the list, followed by one owned by Energy Future Holdings Corp (TXU). of Dallas.

In total, power plants emitted 2,221 million metric tons of carbon dioxide in 2011, down 4.5 percent from 2010, according to the agency. The EPA report showed the benefits of fracking, as it attributed the reduction to cuts in coal use and increased use of gas as fuel by electricity generators. There was also an increased use of power from renewable sources such as solar and wind, the agency said.

Top Emitters

"This report confirms that major carbon reductions from power plants wouldn't be possible without a reliable and affordable supply of domestically produced natural gas," Simon Lomax, research director at Energy in Depth, an industry group, said in an e-mail.

The EPA report on oil and gas looked at emissions from basins, or large production areas, not individual wells. Among the top emitters were ConocoPhillips (COP)' operations in the San Juan basin in New Mexico, and Apache Corp (APA).'s operations in the Permian basin in Texas. Both companies are based in Houston.

"ConocoPhillips continues to seek out ways to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions," Daren Beaudo, a spokesman for the company said in an e-mail. The company is working to cut methane venting with gas conservation and waste-heat recovery, he said.

Apache has been growing rapidly in the Permian basin, where it's now the second-largest producer, Bill Mintz, a spokesman for the company, said in an interview. "We have done some infrastructure projects that improved our emissions performance in 2012."

Proposed Regulations

The EPA has already proposed regulations to curb emissions from new power plants, setting a standard that would preclude the construction of new coal-fired facilities that don't capture and sink underground the carbon coming from their smokestacks. Once those rules are finished in the coming weeks, the EPA must move to establish similar rules for existing power plants.

Environmental groups have asked the agency to establish standards to prevent methane leakages from the drilling, fracking and transport of oil and gas. The boom in that production in states such as Pennsylvania and North Dakota means that those rules are necessary, according to environmental groups.

Methane's lifetime in the atmosphere is much shorter than carbon dioxide, but it's more efficient at trapping radiation, making its short-term impact 20-times greater than carbon dioxide, according to the EPA.

"Reducing fugitive methane emissions is a top priority because they are so powerful" a force for global warming, said Mark Brownstein, managing director of the Environmental Defense Fund in New York. "You want to make sure the goose is laying what approximates golden eggs."

To contact the reporter on this story: Mark Drajem in Washington at mdrajem@bloomberg.net

 

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

New Study: Offshore Tax Dodging Blows $40 Billion Hole in State Budgets


Congress Poised to Debate Closing Corporate Tax Loopholes, Bring States Budget Relief

Read the Report: www.uspirgedfund.org/reports/usf/hidden-cost-offshore-tax-havens

Washington, February 5th – With states across the country facing dire fiscal crunches and lawmakers in Washington gearing up for more budget showdowns, U.S. PIRG Education Fund released a new study revealing that state budgets were hit collectively with $40 billion in lost revenue from offshore tax dodging last year. Many of America’s wealthiest individuals and largest corporations use tax loopholes to shift profits made in America to offshore tax havens, where they pay little to no taxes. U.S. PIRG Education Fund was joined at the event by Congressman Lloyd Doggett, the Main Street Alliance, the American Sustainable Business Council, and a small business owner.

“Offshore tax abuses undermine public confidence in our tax system. They add to both the deficit and the tax burden imposed on small businesses and individuals that play by the rules,” said Congressman Lloyd Doggett (TX-35), a senior member of the House Ways and Means Committee. “In quantifying the enormous cost to our economy of tax haven abuse, U.S. PIRG has, once again, offered valuable work. More state and federal action is required to ensure that the cost of necessary security and other public services is shared fairly.”

“Tax dodging is not a victimless offense. When corporations skirt taxes, the public is stuck with the tab. And since offshore tax dodgers avoid both state and federal taxes, they hurt everyday taxpayers twice,” according to Dan Smith, Tax and Budget Advocate for U.S. PIRG Education Fund and report co-author. “States should be using that money to benefit the public.”

All told, state taxpayers across the country lost nearly $40 billion last year from offshore tax loophole abuse. To put that amount in context, $40 billion roughly equals the total amount spent by all state and local governments on firefighters in 2008. It’s also enough money to cover the educational costs for 3.7 million children for one full year.

At the national level, offshore tax loopholes cost federal taxpayers $150 billion each year, which would be more than enough to cover the scheduled spending cuts that are set to take effect in just a few weeks.

"Our economic progress is undermined when companies are rewarded for financial manipulation rather than innovation and productive investment," said Bryan McGannon, Deputy Director of Policy at the American Sustainable Business Council.

“When corporations use offshore tax havens to avoid paying their taxes, they’re robbing states of the resources they need to lay the foundations for local, independent businesses to grow and thrive,” said Sam Blair, Network Director for the Main Street Alliance. “They’re also leaving small businesses at a direct competitive disadvantage.”

Tax havens are used by both wealthy individuals and corporations. The study found that states lost $28 billion from the corporate abuse of tax havens and $12 billion from individuals.

As of 2008, at least 83 of the top 100 publicly traded corporations in the U.S. used tax havens, according to the Government Accountability Office. At the end of 2011, 290 of the top Fortune 500 companies reported that they collectively held a staggering $1.6 trillion offshore, a Citizens for Tax Justice report found. By using offshore tax havens, corporations and wealthy individuals shift the tax burden to ordinary Americans, forcing us to make up the difference through cutting public services, growing our already big deficit, or raising taxes on everyday citizens.

“Some budget decisions are tough, but closing the offshore tax loopholes that let large companies shift their tax burden to the rest of us is a no-brainer,” Smith added.

Here are some increasingly notorious ways that some of America’s largest corporations drastically shrink their tax bill:

•    Google used accounting techniques nicknamed the “double Irish” and the “Dutch sandwich,” which involved two Irish subsidiaries and one in Bermuda, to help shrink its tax bill by $3.1 billion from 2008 to 2010.
•    Wells Fargo paid no federal income taxes in 2008, 2009, and 2010, despite being profitable all three years, largely due to its use of 58 offshore tax haven subsidiaries.
•    Microsoft avoided $4.5 billion in federal income taxes over three years by using sophisticated accounting tricks to artificially shift its income to tax-friendly Puerto Rico. The company pays its Puerto Rican subsidiary 47% of the revenue generated from its American sales, despite the fact that those products were developed and sold in the U.S.
You can download the report, “The Hidden Cost of Offshore Tax Havens: State Budgets Under Pressure from Tax Loophole Abuse,” here: www.uspirgedfund.org/reports/usf/hidden-cost-offshore-tax-havens
 

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

The ACA Toolbox for Health Reform: What State Health Leaders Aren’t Telling the General Assembly

February 5, 2013

by The Ruoff Group

The Affordable Care Act (ACA) provides health policymakers with a robust set of tools to accomplish important changes to both bring costs under control and improve our health and health care. The coverage expansion which ensures affordable access to this new, high performance health care system is integral to meeting the those goals, not contrary to them as the state’s health leader is telling the General Assembly.

When South Carolina Department of Health and Human Services Director Tony Keck travels the state, his central argument against the ACA and Medicaid expansion is that Congress and the White House asked the wrong question: “How do we insure as many people as possible in the United States?”[1] rather than “How do we get as many people healthy in the United States?”

Keck then points to the “Triple Aim” of health policy first articulated by Dr. Donald M. Berwick, former Administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services of the federal HHS:

 Reduce the per capita cost of health care
 Improve the health of populations
 Improve the patient experience (quality and satisfaction).

We agree with Director Keck’s central premise that we should be paying for health rather than health care, but we disagree that they are mutually exclusive.


Figure 1—with permission of The Commonwealth Fund


In a recent presentation on The Commonwealth Fund’s new report, Confronting Costs: Stabilizing U.S. Health Spending While Moving Toward a High Performance Health Care System (January 2013), Dr. David Blumenthal, M.D., M.P.P., Chair of The Commonwealth Fund, used the chart in Figure 1 to show that the ACA helps move us towards the critically needed changes to the health care system to achieve Keck’s stated goals with a toolbox filled with tools for stabilizing health spending and moving us toward a high performance health care system.

The Keck argument seems to be that we have a choice: provide health insurance coverage or improve our health. Our nation (and state) is facing a health crisis:

1. Massive numbers of uninsured who tax our health systems through inefficient and inappropriate use which often comes too late to be cheap—45 % of non-elderly South Carolina adults with incomes below 138 % of the Federal Poverty Level ($15,856 for a family of one; $32,499 for a family of four) are uninsured[2];

2. Both a very costly and inefficient health system and costs growing faster than the nation’s economy; and

3. Poor health outcomes when compared to other nations.
There are ways to address these. The Commonwealth Fund Commission on a High Performance Health System observes:

As national policy leaders consider approaches to slow and stabilize the growth of federal health spending in ways that also benefit all payers (state and local governments, businesses, and households), it is crucial that these approaches be developed and applied to adhere to and further the goals of a high performance health system. These goals include providing affordable access across the nation to high-quality, well-coordinated and patient-centered care with continuous delivery system innovation. Achieving the goals of a high performance health system, while stabilizing cost growth, requires a focus on the total health system and health care markets, not just federal programs. (Confronting Costs, pp. 18-19; emphasis added.)

Director Keck, a creative health administrator who is using his position to push many of these changes in both public and private sectors in our state, presents a completely false dichotomy. Coverage which ensures affordable access to this new, high performance health care system is integral to meeting the Triple Aim, not contrary to it. When he suggests to the General Assembly and its committees that the ACA only addresses coverage, that is completely untrue.

We can have honest differences over whether South Carolina can afford it’s four percent contribution[3] to a Medicaid Expansion between FY2014 and FY2020. But the state’s chief health policy officer completely mischaracterizing the ACA to the General Assembly can only lead us to bad policy choices on the expansion.
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[1] Unless otherwise noted, all quotes are from Keck’s January 24,2013, presentation to the Senate Medical Affairs Committee’s Affordable Care Act Subcommittee. Video of that presentation is available at: http://www.scstatehouse.gov/video/videofeed.php. Handouts from that meeting are at: https://www.scdhhs.gov/sites/default/files/Medical%20Affairs%20ACA%20Subcommittee%20FINAL%201.24.13.pdf.
[2] US Census Small Area Health Estimates, 2010, at http://www.census.gov/did/www/sahie/data/interactive/.
[3] SCDHHS never shows the marginal costs of the Medicaid Expansion, instead lumping in the unavoidable costs of the ACA, to demonize the ACA and to throw every chunk of cheese and baloney it can onto the scale of Medicaid Expansion costs. If you simply subtract from the costs of their scenario covering a reasonable estimate of costs of the ACA including an expansion their scenario without the expansion, you get $13 billion in total marginal spending, of which the State would be on the hook for $570 million, counting only some of the potential savings from an expansion. These are derived from SCDHHS numbers provided in Milliman Letter to Keck re: AFFORDABLE CARE ACT- FINANCIAL IMPACT SFY 2014 THROUGH SFY 2020 (November 30, 2012).

The Ruoff Group conducts research and policy analysis on issues affecting South Carolinians.  http://TheRuoffGroup.com

Monday, February 4, 2013

Climate change can provide job opportunities


February 1, 2013
By ANDREA KAY , Gannett

Let me say at the outset that I am not a climate-change expert.
I am a big believer in trends as a way to discover and create your next job and stay valuable in a marketplace that can change as fast as the weather. And that brings me to a trend you need to pay close attention to: our weather.

As is the case with almost any change, the shift in weather is affecting jobs two ways: taking them away and leading to new ones. See the draft National Climate Assessment report that Congress requested, recently released for public comment.
Here’s one example of how climate change takes jobs away.

Earlier this month, Cargill Beef said it’s closing one of its Texas plants because of a prolonged drought in the state that thinned cattle herds to their lowest level in 60 years. As a result, 2,000 workers had to relocate to another plant or find new jobs.
No, we’re not an agriculture-based economy anymore. But this sector still employs up to 250,000 workers, making agriculture one of the biggest victims of changing weather patterns, says John A. Challenger, chief executive of Challenger, Gray & Christmas outplacement services.

According to a recent New York Times article by Andrew C. Revkin in which he references the federal report, “climate-change effects on agriculture will have consequences for food security” and food processing, storage, transportation and retailing. And that can affect jobs.
Tourism is another industry affected by the weather.

With ski resorts seeing less snow, skiers are headed further north and resorts are making more artificial snow, Challenger says.
Companies in transportation and travel will be affected as people travel more to climates that stay warmer longer. Again, some jobs will go away; others will increase.

More work will come about as a result of climate change in places where the weather has been more temperate. In Chicago, which has had little snow this year, Challenger points out that construction workers have continued to do their jobs without weather-related stoppages.
And in the aftermath of major storms, “there does tend to be increased economic activity and job creation in the areas impacted as cities and states clean up and rebuild,” he says.

Climate change threatens human health and well-being -- wildfires; decreased air quality; diseases transmitted by insects, food and water, according to the draft report. So public health actions such as preparedness and prevention become paramount.
Strategies to do both can create jobs.

The biggest and most positive effect on employment will come from “initiatives to address and reverse climate change,” Challenger says. These include “the development of new renewable energy sources and the manufacture of more energy-efficient transportation.”
The latest green job statistics from 2010 show that the United States has produced 3.1 million green jobs.

The construction industry “is rife for green jobs,” Challenger says. And utilities and manufacturing have high potential “since equipment to harness and distribute energy more efficiently is being built nationwide.”
When it comes to looking at this trend and your career, think of it like this:

-- What jobs are being created -- or will be created -- to respond to climate change?
-- What jobs will help combat climate change?

-- And what jobs might help reverse climate change?
Career consultant Andrea Kay is the author of “Life’s a Bitch and Then You Change Careers: 9 steps to get out of your funk and on to your future,” www.andreakay.com or www.lifesabitchchangecareers.com. Write to her in care of USA TODAY/Gannett, 7950 Jones Branch Drive, McLean, Va. 22108. E-mail: andrea@andreakay.com. Twitter: @AndreaKayCareer. Facebook: facebook.com/AndreaKayCareerAdvice.


 

Friday, February 1, 2013

Rein in Wall Street, Say Small Business Owners


The Huffington Post

February 1, 2013
 
By John Arensmeyer

 
The latest jobs data shows small businesses are off to a running start in the job creation department this year, proving entrepreneurs are doing more than ever to lift post-recession employment. But it's also true that small firms aren't immune to the lingering effects of our disrupted financial market. Despite the mantra that slackening Wall Street's reins will promote economic growth, recent national opinion polling reveals the majority of entrepreneurs believe the opposite: Wall Street should be held accountable for the financial crisis with rules that are stronger, not weaker.

A whopping 80 percent of small business owners agree with this, according to scientific polling conducted in January for Small Business Majority. Considering the oft-politicized nature of this topic, it's noteworthy that not only was this a majority Republican sample, but more than seven in 10 Republican owners believe we need tougher rules for holding Wall Street accountable. Entrepreneurs aren't politically minded, they're business minded. That's why this isn't a party line issue for them. It's a bottom-line issue, plain and simple, meaning it impacts their capacity to grow and hire.

With that in mind, it shouldn't be surprising that nearly six in 10 entrepreneurs agree that for far too long, Wall Street banks and financial companies wrote their own rules while nobody was looking out for small businesses and consumers. They believe we need the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) -- a federal organization that helps prevent financial companies from using abusive lending practices that can affect small businesses. Eighty-four percent of owners generally support the CFPB, underscoring the consensus that our nation is long overdue for a fairer financial system.

Small business owner Shaundell Newsome couldn't agree more. Shaundell, the president and CEO of Sumnu Marketing in Las Vegas feels more work needs to be done to give small businesses the ability to push back against unfair financial practices. "A lot of small businesses don't have the power or the resources to fight against the big banks and financial companies," he said. "These companies' practices haven't really changed since the recession, which is why it's incredibly important the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau was created to keep them accountable. However, another factor is that many of the protections individuals are seeing should be afforded to small businesses, as well."

Herein lies another issue the poll shed light on: the strong link between small business finance and personal credit. Fifty-eight percent of respondents have used a personal credit card to finance their business, and 53 percent have personally guaranteed a loan for their business. This helps explain why small businesses strongly support provisions of the 2009 Credit CARD Act -- although 'strongly' might be an understatement.

Every single provision we polled on from this law, which established a series of consumer protections from banks and other financial institutions, was supported by nearly 100 percent of respondents. For example, 98 percent support requiring credit card companies to provide clear descriptions of what factors trigger a higher interest amount. But this requirement and others only apply to personal credit cards. Echoing Shaundell Newsome, a sweeping majority of 19 in 20 small employers want consumer protections expanded to protect businesses, too.

If businesses had stronger protection from predatory financial practices, imagine how much more they could do to grow the economy. New employment data indicates firms with fewer than 50 employees created six in 10 new jobs in January. That's a big step in the right direction. However, positive steps forward don't mean it's time to ease back on Wall Street financial institutions, as small business owners have made clear. If we want them to continue playing a significant role in rebuilding our economy, entrepreneurs need protection from the practices that caused our fiscal crisis.