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San Francisco Proposes 'IPO Tax' On Eve of Uber Offering (axios.com) 164

"San Francisco voters this November will be asked to approve a corporate tax increase on stock-based compensation from 0.38% to 1.5%," reports Axios. Since the rate hike would be retroactive to May 7, it would apply to Uber's recent $8 billion IPO. From a report: San Francisco Board of Supervisor Gordon Mar said six supervisors are supporting the ordinance -- the minimum number needed to get the measure on the Nov. 5 ballot. The full board is expected to vote on the plan within the next two months. At least two-thirds of voters would need to support the proposal for it to pass. Mar's proposal calls for raising the stock-based compensation tax from 0.38 percent to 1.5 percent. That increase would generate hundreds of millions of dollars for the city. The tax is levied on San Francisco companies when employees who receive stock as part of their compensation decide to cash in those shares on the public markets or on secondary markets.

But Mar's proposed ordinance concerns the Bay Area Council, which advocates for businesses. "There's no version of this poorly conceived scheme that would get our support," said Rufus Jeffris, a spokesman for the Bay Area Council. "And if the BOS approves putting this misguided proposal on the ballot, we believe voters will communicate the same message." The Bay Area Council is concerned that the higher tax would discourage investment, innovation and jobs in the region.

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San Francisco Proposes 'IPO Tax' On Eve of Uber Offering

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  • by 0xdeaddead ( 797696 ) on Thursday May 09, 2019 @09:15PM (#58566960) Homepage Journal

    Orange man bad! money bad! give it all to the ever wise government of the orange man!

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Your position is just as bad. I could characterize it as "tax bad! let me keep it all! don't need any government services!" but that would be disingenuous. Presumably you agree that there needs to be some taxation so really it's a debate over the level.

      As for Trump, he doesn't seem to have a particularly good grasp of concepts like tariffs or profit... Oh sorry, it was all a scheme to avoid paying a bit of income tax by losing billions. Only a very stable genius could come up with a plan like that.

      • How much $$'s does Trump have? How much do you have? Assuming the "Billion$ and Billions$ lost" were actual (not paper) losses, it would take a genius to come back from that, wouldn't it? NYT thought so in their article...Sounds like Trumps concepts of tariffs and profits are just fine.
    • by ebvwfbw ( 864834 )

      Doesn't go to Trump. This is San Francisco. Democrats that have run the city so pooly as they always do people are shitting on the side walks get the money.

  • by SirAstral ( 1349985 ) on Thursday May 09, 2019 @09:22PM (#58566986)

    When the poor people are too stupid to realize that businesses only pass on their tax liabilities to their customers.

    I can see it now... poor people cheering for this tax increase while whining that their fares have gone up.

    Who wins? Just the tax collectors and all by abusing the class warfare problem.

    Taxing business is the Democrats go-to solution for putting a tax on the poor while having them simultaneously cheer for it. The price of products only goes up while your salaries do not. It is the perfect "confidence con" by making claims that only intelligent and educated people vote democrat.

    • When the poor people are too stupid to realize that businesses only pass on their tax liabilities to their customers.

      I can see it now... poor people cheering for this tax increase while whining that their fares have gone up.

      Who wins? Just the tax collectors and all by abusing the class warfare problem.

      Taxing business is the Democrats go-to solution for putting a tax on the poor while having them simultaneously cheer for it. The price of products only goes up while your salaries do not. It is the perfect "confidence con" by making claims that only intelligent and educated people vote democrat.

      When you're right, you're right, but it seems likely on the order of the existence of tomorrow's negative Trump headline news story that the Republicans care very little for the little man; also, too, and either.

      What say you?

      • Agree... The little man is never cared for, only "words and platitudes" are their rewards for their efforts.

        People in power, or government, or business... all have the same objective. To increase their power or wealth. People should be mindful when someone in power starts sweet talking in their ears like they are there for them.

        • by Anonymous Coward

          The lowest unemployment in 70 years.

          Wages 6.5% higher under Trump than Obama.

          Millions of new good paying jobs.

          The lowest welfare claim rate in almost 30 years.

          You are a sniveling fucking moron. Your globalist overlords need another dick-suck, friend. Better hop to it.

          • Re: (Score:1, Troll)

            by rmdingler ( 1955220 )

            The lowest unemployment in 70 years.

            Wages 6.5% higher under Trump than Obama.

            Millions of new good paying jobs.

            The lowest welfare claim rate in almost 30 years.

            You are a sniveling fucking moron. Your globalist overlords need another dick-suck, friend. Better hop to it.

            Cheesus! Wages have increased almost 3% a year since trump took office? You know what else? The sun has risen several hundred times in the morning, Hail Caesar.

            I had a conversation with a homeless man today. In an admittedly condescending fashion. I asked the chap working the intersection just upstream of road construction (genius on his part, really) why money I had would be better off in his hands.

            "You're just going to work with that money. With that money, I'll clock out for the day right now and enjoy

          • What are you talking about? You have 3.2% growth and what shouldn't grow, grows, and would should grow doesn't grow. A lot of that growth is stock buy back. The jobs that are available aren't good jobs but low wage jobs. You of course have wage stagnation. About 7 million Americans are 90 days late on their auto loan payments, and sales are dropping all over the place. The auto industry is now over 6% in decline in sales, while the electronics industry is down by over 10%. The U.S. just had the most

          • Turns out it's easy to drive economic numbers by going trillions of dollars deeper into debt.

            Trump's administration is on welfare. Useless parasites on working people.

            And you're stupid enough to hear "BOHICA!" and you present for entry.

            • according to many liberals, that's not an issue. Look up Modern Monetary Theory. Go into debt trillions per month, and if inflation picks up due to the money being worthless just raise the taxes and throw the economy in a depression. Hey, it worked for Venezuela!
            • Yeah, but we've been doing the debt shuffle for fifty years. or more.

    • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Thursday May 09, 2019 @10:26PM (#58567178) Journal
      In some cases that's true, but this is taxing employee income, not the businesses. A tax like this could hurt investment, but San Francisco is a place that doesn't need any more jobs, investment, or people.
      • by Anonymous Coward

        Is it purely inertia keeping companies there? The conditions are terrible, the business environment hostile. I have to imagine that every major SF-based business has some sort of exit plan they're working on.

      • That is not correct. The proposed tax is the stock compensation version of a payroll tax: the more compensation the company gives out, the more tax it would pay.

      • San Francisco is a place that doesn't need any more ... investment

        Are you kidding me? There are literal legions of homeless, oceans of human shit, and thousands and thousands of discarded syringes littering the streets. If San Francisco had enough money to fix these problems, it would have already been done.

        • SF spends $40k/bumyear on it's 'homeless industrial complex'. There is no way those people would fuckup their gravy train by actually solving anything.

    • What poor people are you referring to?
      San Francisco has a medium income of $97k, the people shitting on the sidewalks do not pay taxes.

      It's still a bad idea but let SanFran and Cally sink for all most of the country cares.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      When the poor people are too stupid to realize that businesses only pass on their tax liabilities to their customers.

      That's the lie rich people like to peddle. Of course in reality the amount a company charges for a service or good rarely has much to do with the amount of tax it pays. If the company charges $100 now it's because it think's that is the price that will maximize profits, not because it pays a certain amount of tax.

    • -1, conflates costs and prices

    • If you are a resident that is having your quality of life impacted by a business that you will never require the services of, it seems fair to have that business's customers pay for the maintenance of the infrastructure that otherwise helps maintain your quality of life. Attracting new business to a city does nothing if those new businesses don't improve the lives of the local citizens.
  • Its not exactly an ex post facto law, but it seems pretty darn close.

    I

    • Retroactive tax is "unconstitutional" like all other ex-post facto laws.

      The problem is that what is legal and what is Constitutional are different terms, and since no one cares about the Constitution, it just depends on the whims of the judges judging the case.

      Take slavery for example, the constitution still supports its... but only if you have broken the law and are at least barely convicted... however it still may or may not be legal for specific states depending on their own laws to force you to dig tren

      • You'd be a lot more convincing if you: 1) weren't pushing drama, or 2) were remotely correct. Judges actually to care about the Constitution and adhere to it extremely strictly. It's just it doesn't say what people think it does, and it also unlike on social media, a petulant "I was outvoted but I win anyway because Constitution!!!1!" or "I won last election so I get to ignore the Constitution and hurt the people I don't like!!1!" gets your ass laughed out of court.

        The retroactive nature of this proposed ta

        • by msauve ( 701917 ) on Thursday May 09, 2019 @10:36PM (#58567204)
          "Judges actually to care about the Constitution and adhere to it extremely strictly."

          LOL. Dred Scott. Slaughterhouse. Wickard v. Filburn. Citizens United. Want to try again?

          "The retroactive nature of this proposed tax, if it passes at all, will be struck down by the courts."

          Calder v. Bull, US v. Carlton.

          The Emperor has no clothes.US law does not follow any reasonable reading of Constitutional text, and is neither just nor ethical. Being in contempt of court is a bragging right, and the court has made that so.
          • by Anonymous Coward

            Citizens United. You mean someone made a documentary critical of Hillary Clinton during an election and wanted to post it online and the FEC said no no no that's illegal.

          • Retroactive taxes probably should be unconstitutional (what if you spent it all already, for example?), but that's not how the SC sees it.

      • Computer fraud and abuse act. (para) Anything a federal judge doesn't like is a felony, retroactive.

      • Unspoken now, but, in the old prison movies, convicts were still sentenced in court to x years of confinement with hard labor, so there was a reasonable expectation of shovel work and breaking big rocks into little rocks.

        Unfair or not, in today's criminal justice system, forfeiture of many individual civil rights also goes unspoken during the judge's ceremonial handing down of the punishment.

      • "The Supreme Court 'repeatedly has upheld retroactive tax legislation against a due process challenge'."

        https://assetprotectionsociety... [assetprote...ociety.org]

        I think you may be thinking of taxation without representation.

  • "I'm so tired of finding all these golden eggs in my yard! I'll just kill the damn thing!"

    (Psst: The Safeword is "Texas [battleswarmblog.com].")

  • How will this provide goods or services to anyone? How will this tax improve anyone's quality of life?

  • California and its sub-departments are ever on the lookout for new ways to take money from successful people so that they can give it to those who are not, including those who prefer to spend their time with drugs rather than a job and foreigners who are in the (sanctuary) state illegally. Anywhere there is any money in evidence, you can count on California governments to be there skimming as much of it as they can. If it was going to pay the state's debt this would be understandable, but, alas, the Calif

  • Evil. No other word for it.

    Imagine if this were individual income tax.

  • by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Friday May 10, 2019 @07:18AM (#58568198)

    Alcoholic hearing someone crack open a beer, the government is there.

  • Retroactive taxation is a thing? Are you kidding me? As an Ex Post Facto law, doesn't that violate Article 1, Section 10 of the constitution?

    âoeNo State shall enter into any Treaty, Alliance, or Confederation; grant Letters of Marque and Reprisal; coin Money; emit Bills of Credit; make any Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts; pass any Bill of Attainder, ex post facto Law, or Law impairing the Obligation of Contracts, or grant any Title of Nobility.âoe

As you will see, I told them, in no uncertain terms, to see Figure one. -- Dave "First Strike" Pare

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