Senate Panel Limits Pay Deferrals for Executives
Measure Is Part of Broad Tax-Break Package to Help Small Businesses Offset Cost of Minimum Wage Rise
|
Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.
|
Thursday, January 18, 2007
The Senate Finance Committee approved legislation yesterday to limit one element of the big pay packages awarded to corporate executives, a move that business lobbyists saw as the harbinger of an assault on corporations and the wealthy now that Democrats control Congress.
On a voice vote, the committee agreed to change rules permitting some executives to amass millions of dollars in tax-deferred accounts. Limiting that perquisite would raise $806 million over 10 years, by congressional estimates. The money would be used to help cover tax breaks for small businesses hurt by a proposed increase in the minimum wage, a top Democratic priority.
Highly paid executives are not the only target of the new Democratic majority. In an indication of the shifting priorities on Capitol Hill, oil and gas companies could lose tax breaks for drilling to raise money for renewable-energy initiatives. Drug companies are battling a House-passed plan to require the government to negotiate lower prices for Medicare recipients. And a variety of businesses, from insurance companies to wholesalers, are trying to block proposals that would increase their taxes to generate cash for Democratic proposals.
"In an environment like the one we face today, every business is at risk," said Dirk Van Dongen, president of the National Association of Wholesaler Distributors, which is fighting some measures.
"I don't think most people have grasped what they may be facing yet," tax lobbyist Kenneth Kies said. "Every industry should worry."
Stan Collender, who follows congressional budget-making at the public relations firm Qorvis Communications, said that though the business community is rightly nervous, "the Democrats at least are trying to find ways to pay for additional spending by going where the money is: corporate tax breaks and subsidies."
The proposal to limit an executive perk known as deferred compensation is linked, in a complex way, to a proposal to raise the minimum wage to $7.25 an hour from $5.15.
The measure symbolizes an effort on Capitol Hill to find a new political center in a Congress that Democrats control by a narrow margin. The Democrats have placed a high priority on increasing the minimum wage, which has fallen, in inflation-adjusted dollars, to its lowest level in more than 50 years. Senate Republicans, who might have the votes to block the measure, will go along only if there are tax breaks for small businesses that would have to pay higher wages.
But Democrats criticized the federal budget deficit during the campaign, and have pledged not to increase it. To pay for the small-business tax breaks, they came up with a plan to revoke tax provisions that they regard as corporate loopholes and tax shelters.
The result is a grab-bag bill that contains 13 tax breaks worth $8.3 billion over 10 years -- and 14 provisions aimed at raising taxes by a similar amount on corporations, their chief executives and other highly paid workers. The tax package is to be merged on the Senate floor with a minimum-wage bill that has already passed the House. The Senate is expected to take up the issue as soon as next week.
While business lobbyists said they were concerned about several of the tax-raising measures, provisions aimed at executive compensation are causing the most controversy.
The measure would place new restrictions on one of the most popular executive benefits in corporate America. About 95 percent of Fortune 1000 companies offer deferred-compensation packages in some form, said Jeff Varblow, senior vice president of the Cochlan Group, a Chicago firm that specializes in designing and administering the plans.






