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2016 Postmortem
Related: About this forumHow Hillary Clinton Wants To Get Companies To Invest In Workers Rather Than Shareholders
On Friday, Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton will give a speech in which, among other things, she will call for greater transparency and oversight of a tactic companies use to inflate their stock prices and reward shareholders, often at the expense of other investments like workers pay.
Clinton will call for a greater disclosure of stock buybacks, or when companies buy their own shares to decrease the available pool and thus inflate the value of those that remain. The move serves to enrich the shareholders who already own shares and give a short-term boost to the companys stock price. In previewing the speech to the Wall Street Journal, the campaign noted that some countries require stock buybacks to be disclosed daily, but in the U.S. they only have to report them every quarter.
Clinton will also call for a review of securities rules related to shareholder activism. In April, Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D-WI) sent a letter to the head of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) about the growing use of buybacks, noting that it issued a rule in 1982, Rule 10b-18, that changed the way it regulates stock price manipulation and therefore stock buybacks reducing how much it investigated whether these kinds of tactics constituted manipulation. It will be interesting to see how Clinton characterizes the economic damage that buybacks do and whether she calls for the repeal of SEC Rule 10b-18, William Lazonick, a professor of economics at the University of Massachusetts Lowell who has long studied this issue, told ThinkProgress in an email.
....
With all of this money going toward shareholders and boosting stock prices, there is very little left over to give workers raises or make other long-term investments. Thats part of why wages are growing at a just 2 percent annual rate even with a steadily falling unemployment rate. The bottom 60 percent of Americans have experienced a decade of stagnant or declining wages.
Clinton isnt the first candidate to make buybacks an issue. In a June op-ed, current Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) argued, We must demand an end to stock buybacks.
Clinton will talk about other ways to curb the focus on short-term performance at the expense of long-term investments. She will propose a change to the way capital gains investments are taxed, which are currently subject to a much lower rate than regular income. Her plan would involve higher rates on short-term investments but lower rates for longer ones. She also laid out a profit-sharing proposal last week that would give companies a tax credit for sharing the money with employees.
ThinkProgress
Clinton will call for a greater disclosure of stock buybacks, or when companies buy their own shares to decrease the available pool and thus inflate the value of those that remain. The move serves to enrich the shareholders who already own shares and give a short-term boost to the companys stock price. In previewing the speech to the Wall Street Journal, the campaign noted that some countries require stock buybacks to be disclosed daily, but in the U.S. they only have to report them every quarter.
Clinton will also call for a review of securities rules related to shareholder activism. In April, Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D-WI) sent a letter to the head of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) about the growing use of buybacks, noting that it issued a rule in 1982, Rule 10b-18, that changed the way it regulates stock price manipulation and therefore stock buybacks reducing how much it investigated whether these kinds of tactics constituted manipulation. It will be interesting to see how Clinton characterizes the economic damage that buybacks do and whether she calls for the repeal of SEC Rule 10b-18, William Lazonick, a professor of economics at the University of Massachusetts Lowell who has long studied this issue, told ThinkProgress in an email.
....
With all of this money going toward shareholders and boosting stock prices, there is very little left over to give workers raises or make other long-term investments. Thats part of why wages are growing at a just 2 percent annual rate even with a steadily falling unemployment rate. The bottom 60 percent of Americans have experienced a decade of stagnant or declining wages.
Clinton isnt the first candidate to make buybacks an issue. In a June op-ed, current Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) argued, We must demand an end to stock buybacks.
Clinton will talk about other ways to curb the focus on short-term performance at the expense of long-term investments. She will propose a change to the way capital gains investments are taxed, which are currently subject to a much lower rate than regular income. Her plan would involve higher rates on short-term investments but lower rates for longer ones. She also laid out a profit-sharing proposal last week that would give companies a tax credit for sharing the money with employees.
ThinkProgress
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How Hillary Clinton Wants To Get Companies To Invest In Workers Rather Than Shareholders (Original Post)
Capt. Obvious
Jul 2015
OP
So...more "reporting" of something that's already reported, a tax cut and a tax cut. (nt)
jeff47
Jul 2015
#1
jeff47
(26,549 posts)1. So...more "reporting" of something that's already reported, a tax cut and a tax cut. (nt)
MH1
(17,635 posts)2. Profit-sharing is not the same as investing in workers. What about job opportunities?
How is she going to offset systemic incentives for hiring foreign workers (particularly in STEM), by creating incentives to train-up American workers?
I should note that young, promising African-Americans are probably hurt more by the lack of opportunities for Americans, than advantaged young whites.
I would actually like to see this question answered by ALL the Democratic candidates.
ladjf
(17,320 posts)3. Well, that's nice. nt
JaneyVee
(19,877 posts)4. She also proposes higher capital gains taxes on short term trades.
jeff47
(26,549 posts)5. "short term" being 2 years.
So 1 year - no capital gains tax, taxed at up to 39.6%
1-2 years, Clinton's new rate would be up to 30%.
2-6 years, sliding scale down to the 15% current capital gains tax rate.