Archive for August, 2008

Back on Warren Buffett’s Case – Where’s the AMT when you need it?

August 7, 2008

In a prior post, I looked at the claim that Warren Buffett pays less taxes than his secretary:

(1) Based on numbers that WB throws around, his secretary pays about $18,000 in income taxes (to the Feds and state of Nebraska) … not much, but mostly due to the skimpy wages WB pays, not her reported 30% tax rate (Note: to get to 30%, you have to count Social Security taxes, Medicare taxes, Nebraska state taxes … and still do a hard round up)

(2) WB reportedly pays $8 million in taxes (on $46 million income) … obviously, $8 million is greater than $18,000 … but is only 17.7%

I hypothesized that his low rate was attributable to the favorable capital gains rate, but still wondered why WB wasn’t ripped by the Alternative Minimum Tax (the notorious AMT). 

So, I dug a little deeper …

* * * * *

AMT Basics

The AMT was introduced in the late 1960s to snare ultra-high income folks who were using tax shelters and super-sized deductions to minimize their income tax liabilities  — sometimes eliminating the liabilities entirely.  All legal, but not what any objective person would deem fair.

Under the regular IRS rules, you start with your gross income and subtract deductions like mortgage interest, state & local taxes, charitable gifts, and exemptions for dependents. Eventually, you get to your taxable income, apply a tax rate ranging from 10% to 35% depending on your tax bracket, subtract any tax credits (e.g. Child Tax Credit) — and bingo — you have your tax liability.

Under AMT rules, you still start with your gross income, but immediately subtract an AMT “exemption amount” that usually starts in the ballpark of $50,000 and gets scaled back as income rises. 

That sounds good to start, but since many of the usual deductions and exemptions (called “preference items”) are disallowed,   your Alternative Minimum Taxable income may be a lot higher than your regular taxable income.

Some deductions are preserved, including those for mortgage-interest and charitable donations. But, some key breaks (i.e. the preference items) are disallowed. These include state and local income taxes and property taxes, personal exemptions, and the standard deduction (which over 60% of filers take).  

  • State and local taxes are are the lion’s share of the disallowed preference items — almost 2/3’s — which is why high tax rate states (NJ, NY, CT, CA, DC, MS, MA — see table below) have the highest percentage of filers getting hit with the AMT.
     
  • Fewer than 5% of tax filers — all high-earners, by definition — get hit by the AMT  Yet it gets a lot of press attention.  Why ?  Ironically, the original law was crafted by Dems, but it’s folks in blue states (with high state taxes funding high state spending) that get hit most often with AMT. 

The AMT tax rate runs from 20% to 28% — lower than the regular high-bracket 35% — but is applied to the higher Alternative Minimum Taxable Income.  So, under AMT rules, you might end up paying more since you’re paying a lower rate on a greater amount of taxable income.

So, why isn’t Buffett paying a rate close to 28% on his $46 million income ?

Answer: we’re back to the preferential tax rate on capital gains.

* * * * *

AMT & Capital Gains

In a nutshell, Congress didn’t intend for the alternative minimum tax to apply to long-term capital gains. Why? I don’t know and can’t figure out …

And specifically, when Congress reduced the capital gain rates in 1997 and again in 2003, it provided that the lower rates would apply under the AMT, too.

In other words, long-term capital gains don’t get hit with the 28% AMT rate — they get the same preferential rate under the AMT as they do under the regular income tax — 15% for folks in the high brackets. 

So, assuming that most of Buffetts’s income is long-term capital gains, it’s “sheltered” from the AMT and all he has to pay is 15% (on that portion of his income). 

If all of Buffetts income was subject to the “regular” AMT rate, he’d be paying 28%  — a higher federal rate than his secretary’s 15% federal income tax rate (see prior post for details).  And, his tax bill would be almost $13 million, instead of a skimpy $8 million.

Case closed.

* * * * *

So What ?

1. Bumping the high-bracket marginal rate back up over 39% doesn’t fix the “Buffett Paradox”.

2. Increasing the capital gains rate just to “get” Buffett seems like committing the family to the asylum to avoid insulting your crazy uncle.

3. Seems like a quick patch to the AMT would fix the problem …

4. A broader — and more significant version of the Buffett Paradox, called “carried interest” —  involves hedge funds and other private equity partnerships.  That’ll be the subject of a subsequent post.

* * * * * 

Good primers on the AMT:
http://money.cnn.com/2005/11/09/pf/taxes/amt_101/index.htm
http://www.fairmark.com/amt/amt101.htm

* * * * *

* * * * *

Want more from the Homa Files?
 
Click link =>  The Homa Files Blog

* * * * *

Grandiose Plans … and Other Distractions

August 7, 2008

Excerpted from th WSJ Op-Ed “Boone Doggle”, Aug, 6, 2008

Note: the Op-Ed questions Boone Picken’s plan to exploit solar power for electricty and free up natural gas for vehicle use.  I didn’t think the argument was very compelling, but took away a couple of useful bullet points.

* * * * *

Over time, the price mechanism and technology will tell us how to harness the energy that is infinite around us. There’s the sun, the tides, geothermal and nuclear — energy is not in short supply; only know-how is.

* * * * ** * * * *

Asserting that something would be good to do is not “a plan.” Having reasons (to do so,ething) is not “a plan” either … Saying how to do it is “a plan.”

* * * * *

Talk is cheap. Talk favors radical solutions to get rid of problems that we are all sick and tired of hearing about. Calls for Manhattan Projects and moon shots invariably decorate the op-ed pages … in a form of social peacockery, the greater the misallocation of resources proposed, the more lavish the ovation.

* * * * *

Re: CAFE Standards and Fuel Efficiency

Take the universal recrimination over our failure to impose tougher fuel-mileage mandates . . . These complaints are lofted without the slightest attention to what we’ve actually learned in 30 years of such mandates — that car buyers simply amortize their forced investment in fuel-saving technology by driving more miles. They buy more affordable homes farther from town; they commute longer distances to work; they trek across two counties to buy groceries at Wal-Mart rather than the pricey supermarket down the street.

* * * * *

Want more from the Homa Files?
 
Click link =>  The Homa Files Blog

* * * * *

No mustard? No mayo? Just call 911 …

August 7, 2008

Storyline:

Subway “sandwich artists” don’t prep a guy’s sandwch “his way”. 
Guy calls the ultimate consumer help line: 911.

One Minute Highlights -worth watching:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_zFG5-lI_44

Full 911 call (gets a bit tedious):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=smCmGLgg0Nw&feature=related

* * * * *

Sobering thought:

This guy gets to vote in November

* * * * *

Want more from the Homa Files?
 
Click link =>  The Homa Files Blog

* * * * *

That Giant Sucking Sound – 2009

August 6, 2008

Excerpted from the WSJ, Hillary Clinton Op-Ed, Aug. 6, 2008

“Tucked away on the Cayman Islands sits Ugland House, an unassuming, nondescript building of modest scale and size. However, according to a recent report by the Government Accountability Office (GAO), this five-story office building is home to more than 18,000 corporate entities, nearly half of which have U.S. ties.

In the past few years, the number of corporations flocking to places like the Cayman Islands to evade U.S. taxes has exploded … these companies … have used offshore tax havens to avoid paying hundreds of millions of dollars in federal taxes. “

Full Op-Ed:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB121798030763715107.html?mod=opinion_main_commentaries

* * * * *

One rhetorical question:

U.S. corporate tax rates are among the highest in the world.   If we raise them — even if only selectively — say on oil companies — would you expect corporate off-shoring  to speed up or slow down?  Hmmm ….

* * * * *

Want more from the Homa Files?
 
Click link =>  The Homa Files Blog

* * * * *

Starbucks – Grasping for (iced coffee) straws ?

August 6, 2008

Excerpted from CNN.com Aug. 5, 2008

Looking to bring more value-seeking consumers through its doors for a late afternoon caffeine fix, Starbucks … now offers its morning customers any iced grande beverage for $2 after 2 p.m.

The price is a big cut from the normal price of most grande-sized iced drinks. A grande iced latte, for example, costs about $4. To get the discount, customers must present a receipt from their morning Starbucks visit.

The company said it is …  answering consumers’ calls for more value at the chain, which has seen traffic drop as gas prices rise and consumer spending falters.

“It’s easy for baristas to implement and it’s easy for customers to understand.”

In some cities, it has offered discounted drinks on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays. In July, the chain also gave away 12-ounce iced coffees on Wednesdays to customers in New York City, Philadelphia, Washington, Boston and Detroit who turned over an “iced brewed coffee card,” a reusable voucher distributed in stores and newspaper inserts.

“Certainly a discounting approach could lead to a better perception of value in the short run but the longer-term question remains — at the regular everyday price point, would the consumer still see Starbucks as offering the right value for them?”  “That remains uncertain.”

Full post:
http://www.cnn.com/2008/US/08/05/starbucks.deal.ap/index.html

* * * * *

Observations

1.  “Easy for customers to understand” … they’ve got to be kidding … the more hoops that folks have to jump through, the less likely a promotion will succeed.

2.  How will they handle loyal customers who don’t do coupons (or morning coffee) and see the guys in front of them get a half-priced iced-coffee.

3. Does Starbucks know that 2-bucks (no “bounce back” coupon) gets you an large iced coffee at Mickey D’s?  Mrs. H. seems to like them …

4.  Ken’s fundamental law of marketing: if you you want to do something, do it … don’t do it half-way with hooks, lines, and sinkers … otherwise, just don’t do it.

* * * * *

Thanks to Dave Fedlam MSB MBA ’09 for the heads-up … Dave says ” as a typical non-Starbucks customer, 2 cups of coffee for $6/day doesn’t really seem like much of a deal at all.”* * * * *

Want more from the Homa Files?
 
Click link =>  The Homa Files Blog

* * * * *

Uh Oh – McCain busted for plaigarism

August 6, 2008

John McCain’s campaign mocked Barack Obama’s celebrity status with a TV commercial that included comparisons to Paris Hilton.  McCain was blasted by many folks for being juvenille (true !) and by Bob Herbert of the NY Times for being racist (huh?). 

But, McCain got off clean on a very serious charge: plaigarism. 

Seems that McCain’s camp hijacked the Hilton reference from … who else, Obama himself

In 2005 Obama said: “Andy Warhol said we all get our 15 minutes of fame,” says Barack Obama. “I’ve already had an hour and a half. I mean, I’m so overexposed, I’m making Paris Hilton look like a recluse.” 

Busted, Senator McCain

See the Washington Post article “The Senator’s Humble Beginning Rising Star Barack Obama Is Resolutely Down to Earth”,  February 24, 2005
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A48523-2005Feb23.html

* * * * *

Other tidbits from the Post article:

“I just got elected to the U.S. Senate. I haven’t done anything yet.”

“But he comes well steeped in the basic physics of hype.”

“One of the keys to being well liked in Washington is to appear humble … All of this comes naturally to Obama.”

Even in jest, itis a rare instance where Obama lets slip with something that could be construed as immodest:

“I am genuinely somebody who doesn’t get caught up in the hype,” he says.

“You want to make everyone aware that you’re a workhorse.” As opposed to a “show horse.”

Obama is following what is known in Hill parlance as “the Hillary model,” named for the former first lady whose transition into the Senate is considered a prototype of how celebrity senators should proceed.

He invokes a favorite line: “Those who travel the high road of humility don’t face heavy traffic.”

For the full article:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A48523-2005Feb23.html

* * * * *

Observation: you just can’t make this stuff up.

* * * * *

Want more from the Homa Files?
 
Click link =>  The Homa Files Blog

* * * * *

Taxes – Warren Buffett & His Secretary

August 5, 2008

 

HEADLINE: “Warren Buffett’s Secretary Pays More Taxes than He Does” 

 

The story has been making the rounds for the past couple of months and seems to be the determining data point for Barack Obama’s tax plan (e.g. “Bush’s tax cuts for the wealthy who didn’t even wamt them”).

 

Surprisingly (to me), everybody seems to just nod and to take the story at face value without interrogation.  Not me.

 

According to Buffett, he pays taxes at a lower tax rate than does his $60,000-a-year secretary, 17.7 percent and 30 percent, respectively. 

 

Let’s start with the secretary: $60,000 @ at a 30% tax rate. We’ll take her $60,000 salary at face value (but wonder why a generous guy like Buffett would only pay her that piddling amount).

 

What about the 30% rate? To be conservative and simple, let’s assume that the secretary has no dependents and takes the standard deduction.  That would give her taxable income of $50,250 ($60,000 less 1 exemption @ $3,400 and a standard deduction of $5,360) and a federal income tax liability of $8,986.25 —  $4,386.25 + 25% of the excess over $31,850.  So, the secretary’s effective Federal income tax rate is only 15% ($8,986.25 / $60,000). Hmmmm.

 

Well, maybe Buffet is throwing in payroll taxes for Social Security and Medicare.  OK, add on 7.65% — 6.2%  for Social Security and .1.45% for Medicare.  That gets the secretary up to 22.65%.

 

Still short, so add on $2,750 for Nebraska state income taxes and the secretary is up to 27%.  OK, throw in everything including the kitchen sink, give the number a hard round, and we’re up to 30%.  Not the way most people think about tax rates, but let’s not quibble.

  

Let’s see, $60,000 times 30% — the secretary pays $18,000 to the Federal and Nebraska coffers. 

 

Buffett says he earned $46 million in 2006.  Even at a measly 17.7%, that’s over $8 million. Hmmm. I’d say that the usual headline “Warren Buffett Pays Less Taxes than His Secretary” is, perhaps. just a bit deceiving. What do you think? 

 

More interesting (to me) is Buffett’s 17.7% tax rate. How does he get it that low.  After all, the the 35% marginal tax bracket starts around $100,000, so you’d expect that most of his $46 billion would fall into that category, right?

 

Well, he’s probably got clever accountants and claims some pretty staggering (but legal) deductions.  How many would he need to claim to get down to 17.7%? Easy math: his deductions would have to be about $23 million to get his taxable income down to (coincidentally)  $23 million and give him a tax bill of $8 million at a 35% rate. That’s a lot of business dinners and cab rides — especially for self-proclaimed cheapskate.

 

Well, maybe Buffett doesn’t pay the 35% rate.  Hmmmm. Isn’t there an Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT)?

  

How could he do it? That is, pay a rate way below his bracket’s 35%? 

 

My bet: He is a huge beneficiary of the cut in dividend and capital gains rates.  It’s my recollection that Buffett takes a modest cash comp package from Berkshire Hathaway — around .$100,000.  Since BH doesn’t pay material dividends, most of his income probably comes via capital gains — distributions and stock sales.  Tax those at a 15% rate and maybe — just maybe — he really does pay 17.7%..  But, it’s not courtesy of Bush cutting the top marginal rate to 35%.  It’s because the capital gains rate was cut to 15%.

* * * * *

Observations

 

1. $8 million in taxes paid strikes me as a statistically significant number — and certainly greater than $18,000.

 

2,  Resetting the high bracket marginal tax rate to 39% doesn’t fix the “Buffet Problem”

 

3.  What’s up with the AMT if it doesn’t “catch” a uber-earner like Buffett?

 

4.  As many others have suggested, if Mr. Buffett feels so guilty why doesn’t he just write a voluntary check to the US Treasury, and keep the Feds out of our pockets.

* * * * * 

Want more from the Homa Files?
 
Click link =>  The Homa Files Blog

* * * * *

An HBS Mole Reports …

August 5, 2008

 

Excerpted from WSJ review of : Ahead of the Curve, Philip Delves Broughton (Penguin Press, 283 pages, $25.95)

 

Broughton had one of the most desirable jobs in newspapering …  quit and went back to school to study accounting  … at Harvard Business School.

 

He emerged with an ambivalence toward the HBS brand  … particularly the sense of entitlement for which its students and faculty are famous.  

 

Most graduate business schools, you might have noticed, award MBAs. HBS, according to the dean, specializes in “transformational experiences.” The dean says that  HBS grads reject so many routine job offers that of course recruiters are going to resent the school.

 

Broughton was prepared for the number-crunching nerdiness, the intense competitiveness and the unrealistically high levels of self-esteem.  “HBS,” he writes, “had two modes: deadly serious and frat boy, with little in between.”

 

The future titans of American industry celebrated … with  everyone … dressing as his favorite hip-hop star. … at another party, the men were to dress as women and the women as sluts. . . .

 

It is the other mode, the serious, non-frat-boy one, that the reader may find more disconcerting.

 

The jargon-choked faddishness and fatuous therapeutics of pop business books and the modern workplace have seeped into HBS too …  including New Age group bonding games and …a “personal development exercise” called “My Reflected Best Self.”

 

Even  Broughton …  shows signs of succumbing to a version of Stockholm Syndrome — a hostage identifying, if not with his captors. “I was happy I went.” He knows how to do a regression analysis, and he has learned how to make an Excel spreadsheet do everything but play canasta.

 

* * * * *

A study by a banking analyst tried to track the American equity markets in relation to the number of HBS graduates who chose to go to work in finance each year. If the figure was less than 10%, the market went up not long after. More than 30% and the market was headed for a crash. In 2006, 42% of the HBS grads went to work in finance. Right on schedule.

* * * * *

Want more from the Homa Files?
 
Click link =>  The Homa Files Blog

* * * * *

Mktg: Mickey D – How to Raise Prices (w/o Raising Prices)

August 4, 2008

Excerpted from WSJ: McDonald’s Tests Changes In $1 Burger As Costs Rise, 08-04-08

McDonald’s is testing modifications to its popular $1 double cheeseburger, and higher prices for the sandwich … selling it with one slice of cheese instead of two, and billing it as a “double hamburger with cheese ” …. or offering a double hamburger without (any) cheese …  or  selling the traditional double cheeseburger at prices ranging from $1.09 to $1.19.

Launched in 2003, the Dollar Menu has been a key driver of sales at McDonald’s 14,000 U.S. restaurants and has helped it ride out dips in consumer spending. But recently, franchisees have complained that the menu has brought too much unprofitable traffic into their restaurants.

* * * * *

As of late June, sales of the chain’s lattes, cappuccinos and other espresso drinks were off their peak … lower-priced beverages, including $1.89 iced coffee and a $1 … sweet-tea promotion, have pulled some sales away from the espresso drinks … 

McDonald’s overall beverage expansion, adding espresso drinks, smoothies, cold tea, bottled drinks and ice-blended coffee beverages at U.S. locations, is on track to exceed the company’s goal of adding $125,000 a year in sales per restaurant … and adding $1 billion a year to the company’s sales.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB121780568775808337.html?mod=2_1567_topbox

* * * * *

Observations

1.  One way to increase price is to skinny back the product — put fewer cornflakes in the box.

2.  The $1 double cheeseburger is the heart of the menu — dropping it will be a big deal — no way I step up to $1.19 or buy a chesseburger with no cheese.

3.  Has the multi-dollar cup of coffee market peaked ?

* * * * *

Want more from the Homa Files?
 
Click link =>  The Homa Files Blog

* * * * *

What Exactly Is a ‘Windfall’ Profit?

August 4, 2008

Excerpted from a WSJ editorial, Aug4, 2008

The “windfall profits” tax is back …  What is a “windfall” profit anyway? How does it differ from your everyday, run of the mill profit? Is it some absolute number, a matter of return on equity or sales — or does it merely depend on who earns it?

Senator Obama says government would take “a reasonable share” of oil company profits …  Senator Durbin says “The oil companies need to know that there is a limit on how much profit they can take in this economy.”

Take Exxon Mobil, which … is the main target of any “windfall” tax surcharge …   Between 2003 and 2007, Exxon paid $64.7 billion in U.S. taxes, exceeding its after-tax U.S. earnings by more than $19 billion.

Exxon’s profit margin stood at 10% for 2007, which is hardly out of line with …  the 8.9% for U.S. manufacturing (excluding the sputtering auto makers) … Chemicals had an average margin of 12.7%. Computers: 13.7%. Electronics and appliances: 14.5%. Pharmaceuticals (18.4%) and beverages and tobacco (19.1%)

If Senator Obama is as exercised about “outrageous” profits as he says he is, he might also have to turn on a few liberal darlings. Oh, say, Berkshire Hathaway. Warren Buffett’s outfit pulled in $11 billion last year, up 29% from 2006. Its profit margin — if that’s the relevant figure — was 11.47%, which beats out the American oil majors.

Or consider Google, which earned a mere $4.2 billion but at a whopping 25.3% margin. Google earns far more from each of its sales dollars than does Exxon, but why doesn’t Mr. Obama consider its advertising-search windfall worthy of special taxation?

The point is that what constitutes an abnormal profit is entirely arbitrary. It is in the eye of the political beholder …  a windfall is nothing more than a profit earned by a business that some politician dislikes. 

* * * * *

Full editorial (worth reading):
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB121780636275808495.html?mod=opinion_main_review_and_outlooks

** * * * *

For hard numbers, see prior post:
https://kenhoma.wordpress.com/2008/06/26/numbers-price-gouging-windfall-profits/

* * * * *

Want more from the Homa Files?
 
Click link =>  The Homa Files Blog

* * * * *

Exxon — Another Windfall ?

August 4, 2008

Excerpted from IBD, August 1, 2008

Exxon Mobil reported record second-quarter income — indeed, the highest quarterly profit for any corporation ever … and, a massive (tax) windfall for the US Treasury.

In the first half, Exxon Mobil’s after-tax income rose 15% to $22.6 billion. A lot of money, to be sure, until you consider that Exxon Mobil paid (almost 3 times as much) — $61.7 billion — in taxes — also a record.

As economist Mark Perry has noted, Exxon Mobil will pay more taxes this year to the U.S. Treasury than the bottom 50% of all taxpayers — combined.

* * * * *

Note: Jimmy Carter’s windfall profits tax led to a 6% drop in domestic oil output and as much as a 15% surge in oil imports, according to the Congressional Research Service.

* * * * *

For full article:
http://www.ibdeditorials.com/IBDArticles.aspx?id=302483718997031

* * * * *

Want more from the Homa Files?
 
Click link =>  The Homa Files Blog

* * * * *

Obama leads McCain among low-wage workers

August 4, 2008

Excerpted from Reuters,  08-04-08

Obama holds a two-to-one lead over McCain among low-wage workers (nearly a quarter of U.S. adults, earning $27,000 or less) … Obama’s advantage is due largely to overwhelming support from African Americans and Hispanics.

The group views Obama as the more empathetic candidate and the one who most closely shares their values …  92% of African Americans chose Obama as the candidate most concerned with their problems; not a single black respondent said that about McCain, the Post said.

Most of the respondents were pessimistic about the impact of the November 4 election. A majority of those polled, both white and minority, said that no matter who won their personal financial situation would be unlikely to change, it said.

* * * * *

Want more from the Homa Files?
 
Click link =>  The Homa Files Blog

* * * * * 

 

That Giant Sucking Sound – 2008

August 3, 2008

In 1992, according to then presidential candidate Ross Perot, “the giant sucking sound” was the flow of U.S. jobs to Mexico under NAFTA.  Arguably, the 2008 sucking sound is the flow of capital and corporate ownership out of the U.S.  The latest: InBev’s purchase of Anheuser-Busch

Excerpted from the WSJ, “This Bud’s for Belgium”, August 3, 2008

Politicians and Wall Streeters are starting to ask why the Belgian beer company InBev purchased Anheuser-Busch and not the other way around … though shareholders were the big winners here with a $50 billion-plus takeaway.

But here’s the real question: Was the takeover basically financed by the savings … from escaping America’s increasingly uncompetitive corporate tax system? …  Bottom line: InBev (pays Belgium) around 20% of its profits in corporate taxes … (versus) Anheuser-Busch’s U.S. rate 38.4%.

The country will continue to see its competitive edge wither away without a corporate tax rate cut. Mr. McCain … wants to cut the corporate tax rate to 25%, close to the global average. Senator Obama is more interested in raising tax rates than cutting them.

Wall Street dealmakers tell us to expect more sales of U.S. companies to European rivals thanks to the combination of America’s higher corporate taxes and the weak dollar … the U.S. is pricing itself out of the market as a corporate headquarters. “America’s 35% corporate tax rate is … just bad economics”.

For full editorial:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB121770579562707543.html?mod=opinion_main_review_and_outlooks

* * * * *

Observations

1.  Compounding the weak dollar and high corporate tax rates is the massive transfer of wealth to the oil producing nations and their sovereign wealth funds.

2.  Rhetorical question: what’s the likely impact of a windfall profits tax on U.S. based oil companies?

* * * * *

Want more from the Homa Files?
 
Click link =>  The Homa Files Blog

* * * * *

Goliath vs. Goliath – Walmart vs Obama

August 3, 2008

Excerpted from the WSJ, “Wal-Mart Warns of Democratic Win”, August 1, 2008

Through almost all of its 48-year history, Wal-Mart has fought hard to keep unions out of its stores …  (When) a small number of butchers (unionized) in early 2000 … the company phased out butchers in all of its stores and began stocking prepackaged meat. When a store in Canada voted to unionize …  the company closed the store, saying it had been unprofitable for years.

(Now) Wal-Mart is … warning that if Democrats win power in November, they’ll likely change federal law to make it easier for workers to unionize companies.

Wal-Mart executives claim that … unionization could mean fewer jobs as … payroll and health costs (rise) for companies already being hurt by rising fuel and commodities costs and the tough economic climate.

Wal-Mart’s worries center on a piece of legislation known as the Employee Free Choice Act … the U.S. Chamber of Commerce has made defeat of the legislation a top priority.

Wal-Mart makes it clear that voting for Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Barack Obama would be tantamount to inviting unions in (since) Sen. Obama co-sponsored the legislation … known as “card check,” …  Sen. John McCain, the opposes the Employee Free Choice Act and voted against it last year.

The Employee Free Choice Act  … would simplify and speed labor’s ability to unionize companies. Currently, companies can demand a secret-ballot election to determine union representation.

The proposed legislation,  would let unions form if more than 50% of workers simply sign a card saying they want to join. It is far easier for unions to get workers to sign cards because the organizers can approach workers repeatedly, over a period of weeks or months, until the union garners enough support.

Employers argue that the card system could lead to workers being pressured to sign by pro-union colleagues and organizers.

Unions consider the Employee Free Choice Act as vital to the survival of the labor movement, which currently represents 7.5% of private-sector workers, half the percentage it did 25 years ago. (see chart below)

Business-backed lobbying groups are running ads … using  an actor from the “Sopranos” TV series about mob life to hammer home their point.

For full article (worth reading):
http://online.wsj.com/article_print/SB121755649066303381.html

* * * * *

My POV

1.  I was surprised to see how low the private sector unionization rate had fallen.

2.  The Sopranos ad — which was playing on news shows over the weekend — is quite effective. It plays off historical sterotyping to make a strong visceral point.

4.  The argument that secret ballots are a bad thing seems to have some holes  …  should we eliminate the secret ballot for presidential elections, too?

* * * * *

From the WSJ article:

 * * * * *

Want more from the Homa Files?
 
Click link =>  The Homa Files Blog

* * * * *

Obama says he'll support offshore drilling

August 2, 2008

Excerpted from McClatchy Newspapers, August 1, 2008 

Headline: “In major change, Obama says he’ll support offshore drilling”

Barack Obama Friday dropped his opposition to offshore oil drilling, saying he could go along with the idea if it was part of a broader energy package. Obama made his comments in St. Petersburg during an interview with the Palm Beach Post.

“My interest is in making sure we’ve got the kind of comprehensive energy policy that can bring down gas prices …  in order to get that passed, we have to compromise in terms of a careful, well thought-out drilling strategy that was carefully circumscribed to avoid significant environmental damage.

The change is dramatic because Obama often pointed to his opposition to drilling as a key difference between himself and presumptive Republican presidential nominee John McCain.

But the concept has proven popular, and McCain has made it a centerpiece of his stump speeches and some of his television ads. Political momentum has been moving in favor of opening up U.S. coastlines.

Obama also said, in a separate statement issued by his campaign, that he supported the bipartisan energy plan offered by 10 senators Friday.

The proposal would end most of the ban on drilling. It would allow a 50-mile buffer on the east coast, as well as Florida’s west coast. Virginia, North Carolina, Georgia and South Carolina would be permitted to start oil and natural gas exploration outside the buffer. 

Currently, the government bans exploration and drilling on the Pacific and Atlantic coasts and most of the eastern Gulf of Mexico, to protect U.S. beaches and fisheries from pollution.

For full article: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/homepage/story/46174.html

* * * * *

Other confirming articles:
http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2008/08/02/america/NA-POL-US-Elections.php
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080802/ap_on_el_pr/obama

* * * * *

Want more from the Homa Files?
 
Click link =>  The Homa Files Blog

* * * * *

Happenings – The Berlin Rock Star

August 1, 2008

Let’s play “Who am I ?”

I was born on a tropical island.

I spent some of my childhood in the United States.

Then I moved abroad with my single mother.

I have exotic good looks and magnetic charisma.

My “stage presence” is engaging beyond compare.

Fans (especially women) often faint at my events

I’ve been compared to other young “greats” who preceded me

An event in Berlin, Germany cast me onto the world’s stage.

The media adored me.

Who am I ?

scroll down for answer

       V

       V

       V

       V

       V

       V

       V

Answer

Of course, I’m Fabrice Morvan — formerly of Milli Vanilli. 

I was born in Guadalupe, moved to Miami, then moved to Paris with my single mother. 

I was modeling and breakdancing in Berlin when producer Frank Varian picked me and Rob Pilatus to become the duo fronting Milli Vanilli.  

We sold over 30 million singles, 14 million albums and became one of the most popular acts in the world. 

We played to packed venues and achieved worldwide adulation — including a Grammy.  

We were often compared to Bob Dylan, Elvis Presley, Paul McCartney, and Mick Jagger. 

Then, during a live MTV performance at the Lake Compounce theme park in Bristol, Connecticut, a playback  machine jammed. 

Only then did people realize that we were simply lip syncing recorded tracks.  While we put on a great show, we couldn’t sing. 

Fans were disappointed, we had to give back our Grammy, and our success turned to infamy as con artists. 

 “Our career came to a sudden and ignominious end: Fakers. Frauds. A blatant marketing scam. ”

* * * * *

The nuns used to teach me that history repeats.  Hmmm … 

* * * * *

Primary source: http://music.yahoo.com/ar-257262-bio–Milli-Vanilli

Additional background provided by Wikipedia – The Free Encyclopedia: – and official reference for settling Homa family bets  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milli_Vanilli

* * * * *

Want more from the Homa Files?
 
Click link =>  The Homa Files Blog

* * * * *