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- CNBC: Small Businesses Split on Obama Budget
2/13/12 - Portfolio: What Obama's 2013 Budget Means for Entrepreneurs
2/13/12 - CBS News: Many small business owners favor "Buffett rule"
2/9/12 - Greenville News: Poll: Small business owners’ opinions differ from big business concerns
2/9/12 - Detroit Lakes Tribune: Bill introduced to cut U.S. tax loopholes
2/8/12 - The Daily Reveille: Corporations should pay more taxes, poll says
2/8/12 - UPI: Poll: Corporations dodge taxes
2/6/12 - Huffington Post: Small Businesses Believe Wealthy And Big Corporations Not Paying Their Fair Share Of Taxes
2/6/12 - Inc.: Small Business: Tax System Favors Big Corporations & the Wealthy
2/6/12 - Minimum wage news at our BUSINESS FOR A FAIR MINIMUM WAGE website
12/24/11 - InvestorPlace: 10 Worst Countries for Tax Evasion
12/23/11 - New York Times: A Family’s Billions, Artfully Sheltered
11/27/11 - ArtVoice: The Real Looters
11/27/11 - Think Progress: Average Bush Tax Cut For 1% This Year Will Be Greater Than Average Income Of Other 99%
11/23/11 - Huffington Post: Superfail!
11/21/11 - Nationally syndicated Op-Ed: Holly Sklar, Repatriation Con Games
11/12/11 - Boston Business Journal: Small-business sympathies for the occupiers
11/11/11 - East Valley Tribune (AZ): Small business needs changes from Congress
11/10/11 - CNBC: Small Biz Owners Ask Big Business To Pay Fair Share
11/7/11 - Business News Daily: Many Large Corporations Avoid Paying US Income Tax
11/7/11
New York Times: A Family’s Billions, Artfully Sheltered
By David Kocieniewski
New York Times, Sunday Nov 27, 2011
Excerpt: As he stood in the opulent marble foyer of a Fifth Avenue mansion late last month, greeting the coterie of prominent guests arriving at his private art gallery, Ronald S. Lauder was doing more than just being a gracious host. ...
The charitable deductions generated by Mr. Lauder … are just one facet of a sophisticated tax strategy used to preserve a fortune that Forbes magazine says makes him the world’s 362nd wealthiest person. From offshore havens to a tax-sheltering stock deal so audacious that Congress later enacted a law forbidding the tactic, Mr. Lauder has for decades aggressively taken advantage of tax breaks that are useful only for the most affluent.
The debate over whether to reduce tax shelters and preferences for the rich is one of the most volatile in Washington and will move to the presidential campaign, now that repeated attempts in Congress to strike a grand bargain over spending cuts and an overhaul of the tax code have failed.
A handful of billionaires like Warren E. Buffett and Bill Gates have joined Democrats in calling for an elimination of the breaks, saying that the current system adds to the budget deficit, contributes to the widening income gap between the richest and the rest of society, and shifts the tax burden onto small businesses and the middle class. Republicans have resisted, saying the tax increases on the wealthy would harm the economy and cost jobs.
…
The tax burden on the nation’s superelite has steadily declined in recent decades, according to a sliver of data released annually by the I.R.S. The effective federal income tax rate for the 400 wealthiest taxpayers, representing the top 0.000258 percent, fell from about 30 percent in 1995 to 18 percent in 2008, the most recent data available.
…
“It’s admirable when people back their charitable impulses up with donations,” said Scott Klinger, tax policy director of the group Business for Shared Prosperity. “But the tax code shouldn’t allow the wealthy the kind of loopholes that let them, essentially, force other taxpayers to underwrite donations to their pet causes.”
Copyright 2011 New York Times Co.