New York state may tax out-of-state hedge fund execs |
Date: Tuesday, June 29, 2010
Author: Reuters
Recession-hit New
York could raise an extra $50 million a year by collecting income taxes
from people who work for hedge funds in the state but live elsewhere,
according to a legislative plan to raise revenue. The new plan would tax so-called carried
interest. A spokesman for
Democratic Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver said by telephone on Monday
that it means hedge fund managers would be treated the same way as other
commuters. Congress also has
considered taxing carried interest -- profits gleaned by managing assets
-- at ordinary income rates -- much to the dismay of hedge fund and
private equity titans. But last
week, the federal proposal collapsed with a bill extending unemployment
benefits. So for the moment, investment managers still pay only the 15
percent federal capital gains tax on their profits. Democratic Governor David Paterson and New
York lawmakers have balked at broad-based tax hikes after last year,
when the top state income tax was raised to 8.97 percent for people
whose annual earnings top $500,000. Making
hedge fund managers pay the state income tax is one of several options
the Legislature devised after rejecting several of Paterson's proposed
revenue-raisers, from letting grocers sell wine to raising tuition at
public universities. With the
recession shrinking New York's tax revenue, the Democratic-led
Legislature and governor are still feuding over how to fill a $9.2
billion deficit nearly three months after missing the deadline for
enacting a $135 billion budget. So
far, New York has not had to shut the services people need, from police
to healthcare, because the Legislature each Monday has enacted
Paterson's weekly emergency spending bills. But
this time, the Legislature rejected Paterson's emergency spending bill
because he inserted more of the full-year cuts he has been including in
the past few measures. BITTER PILL
FOR SWEET CHARITY On Monday, the
Assembly and Senate in a joint statement said they will not accept
Paterson's latest measure because it was more than 30 days past the
governor's deadline for submitting amendments to his budget plan. The Legislature plans to approve a bill on
Monday that it said includes enough money to avert a government
shutdown; on Tuesday, it expects to enact a revenue bill that includes a
mix of its revenue-raisers and Paterson's proposals. This list includes charging the state's 4
percent sales tax on clothing and footwear that costs less than $110,
starting in October, and cutting in half the amount of charitable
contributions allowed as itemized deductions to 25 percent for people
with New York adjusted gross income above $10 million a year. The Legislature plans to defer some
business tax credits, restrict property-tax rebates for wealthy
individuals, and offer film makers an extra $420 million of credits each
year. But Paterson says he will
veto extra funds the Legislature plans to approve, including $600
million for schools. Saying
lawmakers must enact a balanced budget, the governor on Sunday told New
York City reporters: "I do not want to come back to balance an
unbalanced budget the way we did last year."
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