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U.S. Subsidy Law Funds Luxury Hotels

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  • U.S. Subsidy Law Funds Luxury Hotels

    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-0...ry-hotels.html
    Since 2003, some of the world’s biggest financial companies, including Goldman Sachs Group Inc., U.S. Bancorp, JPMorgan Chase and Prudential, have taken advantage of a federal subsidy that will cost taxpayers $10.1 billion -- and most of the public has never heard of it.

    Investors have used the program, called New Markets Tax Credits, to help build more than 300 upscale projects, including hotels, condominiums, office buildings and a car museum, on streets far from poverty, according to Treasury Department records released through a federal Freedom of Information Act request.

    Money spent on high-end development could have been used to build more than 1,000 job-training centers, medical clinics and schools. The program, endorsed by Republican Senator Rick Santorum and House Speaker Dennis Hastert and adopted by Congress, was signed into law by President Bill Clinton in 2000.

    Building high-end commercial projects goes against the intent of the New Markets program, says Cliff Kellogg, a former senior policy adviser at the Treasury Department who helped design New Markets.

    “Things like luxury hotels are entirely contrary to what we set out to do,” says Kellogg, who’s now a bank consultant. “Some hotels may create jobs and spur other nearby investment, but you have to ask if these projects prevent worthwhile ones from getting done.”

  • #2
    Re: U.S. Subsidy Law Funds Luxury Hotels

    It's the way it is. We live in a class-based society, with privilege. I had a little talk with a local FIREman. His family is deep into the local rentier world, which is his and his wife's fulltime occupation. He recognized things were a mess. That was our common ground. Then the earth slipped away.

    He felt sorry for the banks. "Who in their right mind would want to be a banker today, with our socialist president regulating the hell out of them. They can't do a thing." I tried to counter that the non-TBTF banks did have my sympathy. A look of confusion passed over his face.

    He was well aware the local governments were all in deep fiscal doo-doo. Pensions would have to be cut, especially to school teachers. He wasn't as sure about the police. He has a lot of assets that need watching. I agreed that many public pension plans were out of control and needed reining in. On the issue of health benefits for public service retirees he was conflicted. He sits on the board of one of the local branches of Big Med.

    The conversation seemed to end when I touched on the public underwriting of the rentier class. Not in those words, naturally. His first response was, "Damn right, they'd like to take those away!" Followed by a look of consternation . . . .

    He need not worry.

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