3. BIG PERKS FOR THE WEALTHY HIDDEN IN MINIMUM WAGE
BILL
Source: THE NEW REPUBLIC, Date: October 28, 1996, Title: "Bare
Minimum: Goodies for the Rich Hidden in Wage Bill,"* Author: John
Judis, (Reprinted in Santa Rosa Press Democrat, October 13, 1996)
On August 20,1996, President Clinton signed into law the Small Business
Job Protection Act of 1996, ostensibly geared to aid small business
owners and their employees. The publicized intent of the bill was to
raise the minimum wage from $4.25 to $5.15 an hour. However, according
to John Judis, senior editor of The New Republic, the minimum wage bill
included at least ten other significant provisions aimed at neither
small business owners nor their employees. Indeed, Judis charges, these
unpublicized provisions may negate whatever good the bill may do.
Among the lowlights:
o The bill reinstates tax incentives which encourage leveraged buyouts
(LBOs): In a moment of temporary sanity, Congress put into the 1986
tax reform bill a measure preventing firms that engage in LBOs from
claiming a tax deduction for the exorbitant fees they pay investment
banks and advisors. However, this year's minimum wage bill once again
makes these fees deductible and does so retroactively, creating a
billion-dollar boon for companies that contested the 1986 ruling.
And in the case of employee LBOs, generally thought to be favorable,
Congress slipped into the minimum wage bill a provision that would
eliminate a special incentive that allowed banks to exclude half of
the interest payments they received on loans for employee buyouts,
discouraging employee LBOs of otherwise doomed companies.
o Incentives for multinational corporations: The new minimum wage
bill has successfully protected American multinationals from paying
taxes on unrepatriated foreign income, a long-standing tax loophole
for overseas corporations. In Clinton's 1992 Presidential campaign,
he vowed to do away with these tax incentives; however, in 1993 his
Administration backed down, merely requiring overseas firms to reinvest
their unrepatriated profits in foreign plants and equipment rather
than banking them. Under the new minimum wage bill, however, this
year's Congress rescinded even that.
o Weakened retirement and pension protection: The bill does away
with a requirement that companies must offer the same benefits to
lower wage employees as they do to higher wage employees, and effectively
reverses the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA),
which states that if an insurance company takes too much in fees or
invests in risky ventures they can be sued.
Additionally, the bill does away with a surtax on luxury car purchases
and diesel fuel for yachts, ends a surtax on one-year pension withdrawals
over $150,000 (a boon for the ultra-rich), and allows newspaper publishers
to treat their distributors and carriers as independent contractors
rather than employees in order to avoid paying their Social Security
and unemployment compensation.
SSU Censored Researchers: Brooke Hale, Mark Lowenthal
COMMENTS: John B. Judis, author of the New Republic article,
says, "I wrote the article because the coverage of the subject
had been extremely superficial. The only general publication to deal
at all with the fine print was Business Week.
"If the public had a better idea what was in the bill Congress
passed, they'd be even less enthusiastic about the institution. I've
had members of Congress tell me they didn't know what was in it, and
were shocked by my article," says Judis.
Judis believes the limited media coverage of the hidden perks of the
minimum wage bill serves the interests of "all the various lobbyists,
and the politicians that they cajole into doing their business."